List_of_Oecobiidae_species

List of Oecobiidae species

List of Oecobiidae species

Add article description


This page lists all described species of the spider family Oecobiidae accepted by the World Spider Catalog as of January 2021:[1]

Lebanoecobius

Lebanoecobius Wunderlich, 2004[2]

  • L. schleei Wunderlich, 2004 — Cretaceous Lebanese amber

Mizalia

Mizalia Koch and Berendt, 1854[2]

  • M. blauvelti Petrunkevitch, 1942 — Palaeogene Baltic amber
  • M. gemini Wunderlich, 2004 — Palaeogene Baltic amber
  • M. rostrata Koch and Berendt, 1854 (type) — Palaeogene Baltic amber
  • M. spirembolus Wunderlich, 2004 — Palaeogene Baltic amber

Oecobius

Oecobius
Oecobius annulipes

Oecobius Lucas, 1846

  • O. achimota Shear & Benoit, 1974 — Ghana
  • O. aculeatus Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. affinis O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872 — Lebanon
  • O. agaetensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. albipunctatus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872 — Syria
  • O. alhoutyae Wunderlich, 1995 — Kuwait
  • O. amboseli Shear & Benoit, 1974 — Egypt, Ethiopia, Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda. Introduced to Denmark, Netherlands, Belgium
  • O. annulipes Lucas, 1846 — Algeria
  • O. ashmolei Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. beatus Gertsch & Davis, 1937 — Mexico
  • O. bracae Shear, 1970 — Mexico
  • O. brachyplura (Strand, 1913) — Israel
    • O. b. demaculatus (Strand, 1914) — Israel
  • O. bumerang Wunderlich, 2011 — Canary Is.
  • O. caesaris Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. cambridgei Wunderlich, 1995 — Lebanon
  • O. camposi Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. cellariorum (Dugès, 1836) (type) — Mediterranean, Russia (Europe), Azerbaijan, Jordan, Iran. Introduced to USA, China, Japan
  • O. chiasma Barman, 1978 — India
  • O. civitas Shear, 1970 — Mexico
  • O. concinnus Simon, 1893 — Brazil to Mexico and USA (Florida). Introduced to Seychelles, Laos, Japan (Ogasawara Is.)
  • O. culiacanensis Shear, 1970 — Mexico
  • O. cumbrecita Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. depressus Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. dolosus Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. doryphorus Schmidt, 1977 — Canary Is.
  • O. duplex Wunderlich, 2011 — Canary Is.
  • O. eberhardi Santos & Gonzaga, 2008 — Costa Rica
  • O. erjosensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. fahimii Zamani & Marusik, 2018 — Iran
  • O. ferdowsii Mirshamsi, Zamani & Marusik, 2017 — Iran
  • O. fortaleza Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. fuerterotensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. furcula Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. gomerensis Wunderlich, 1980 — Canary Is.
  • O. hayensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. hidalgoensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. hierroensis Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. hoffmannae Jiménez & Llinas, 2005 — Mexico
  • O. idolator Shear & Benoit, 1974 — Burkina Faso
  • O. iguestensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. ilamensis Zamani, Mirshamsi & Marusik, 2017 — Iran
  • O. incertus Wunderlich, 1995 — North Africa
  • O. infierno Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. infringens Wunderlich, 2011 — Canary Is.
  • O. interpellator Shear, 1970 — USA
  • O. isolatoides Shear, 1970 — USA, Mexico
  • O. isolatus Chamberlin, 1924 — USA, Mexico
  • O. juangarcia Shear, 1970 — Mexico
  • O. kowalskii Magalhães & Santos, 2018 — Madagascar
  • O. lampeli Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. latiscapus Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. linguiformis Wunderlich, 1995 — Canary Is.
  • O. longiscapus Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. machadoi Wunderlich, 1995 — Portugal, Spain
  • O. maculatus Simon, 1870 — Mediterranean to Azerbaijan. Introduced to USA
  • O. marathaus Tikader, 1962 — Tropical Africa. Introduced to Brazil, India, Laos, Taiwan, Japan, Australia (Queensland)
  • O. maritimus Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. minor Kulczyński, 1909 — Azores, Madeira
  • O. nadiae (Spassky, 1936) — Azerbaijan, Iran, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, China
  • O. navus Blackwall, 1859 — Europe, northern Africa, Caucasus. Introduced to South Africa, China, Korea, Japan, New Zealand, Canada, USA, South America
  • O. palmensis Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. parapsammophilus Wunderlich, 2011 — Canary Is.
  • O. pasteuri Berland & Millot, 1940 — West Africa
  • O. paulomaculatus Wunderlich, 1995 — Algeria
  • O. persimilis Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. petronius Simon, 1890 — Yemen
  • O. piaxtla Shear, 1970 — Mexico
  • O. pinoensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. przewalskyi Hu & Li, 1987 — Tibet
  • O. psammophilus Wunderlich, 2011 — Canary Is.
  • O. pseudodepressus Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. putus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1876 — Egypt, Sudan to Iran, Azerbaijan, Afghanistan, India. Introduced to USA, Mexico
  • O. rhodiensis Kritscher, 1966 — Greece (incl. Crete), Turkey
  • O. rioensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. rivula Shear, 1970 — Mexico
  • O. rugosus Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. selvagensis Wunderlich, 1995 — Selvagens Is.
  • O. sheari Benoit, 1975 — Chad
  • O. similis Kulczyński, 1909 — Madeira, Canary Is., Azores, St. Helena
  • O. simillimus Wunderlich, 2011 — Canary Is.
  • O. sinescapus Wunderlich, 2017 — Canary Is.
  • O. sombrero Wunderlich, 1987 — Canary Is.
  • O. tadzhikus Andreeva & Tystshenko, 1969 — Tajikistan, Turkmenistan
  • O. tasarticoensis Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. teliger O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872 — Greece, Turkey, Lebanon
  • O. templi O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1876 — Egypt, Sudan
  • O. tibesti Shear & Benoit, 1974 — Chad
  • O. trimaculatus O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872 — Israel
  • O. unicoloripes Wunderlich, 1992 — Canary Is.
  • O. piliformis Wunderlich, 1988

Paroecobius

Paroecobius Lamoral, 1981

  • P. nicolaii Wunderlich, 1995 — South Africa
  • P. private Magalhães & Santos, 2018 — Madagascar
  • P. rico Magalhães & Santos, 2018 — Madagascar
  • P. skipper Magalhães & Santos, 2018 — Madagascar
  • P. wilmotae Lamoral, 1981 (type) — Botswana

Platoecobius

Platoecobius Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935

  • P. floridanus (Banks, 1896) (type) — USA
  • P. kooch Santos & Gonzaga, 2008 — Argentina

Retrooecobius

Retrooecobius Wunderlich, 2015[2] - †Retrooecobiinae

Uroctea

Uroctea
Uroctea compactillis

Uroctea Dufour, 1820

  • U. compactilis L. Koch, 1878 — China, Korea, Japan
  • U. concolor Simon, 1882 — Yemen
  • U. durandi (Latreille, 1809) (type) — Mediterranean
  • U. gambronica Zamani & Bosselaers, 2020 — Iran
  • U. grossa Roewer, 1960 — Iran, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan
  • U. hashemitorum Bosselaers, 1999 — Jordan
  • U. indica Pocock, 1900 — India
  • U. lesserti Schenkel, 1936 — China, Korea
  • U. limbata (C. L. Koch, 1843) — Senegal to North Africa, Middle East to Central Asia
  • U. manii Patel, 1987 — India
  • U. matthaii Dyal, 1935 — Pakistan
  • U. multiprocessa Z. Z. Yang & Zhang, 2019 — China
  • U. paivani (Blackwall, 1868) — Canary Is., Cape Verde Is.
  • U. quinquenotata Simon, 1910 — South Africa
  • U. schinzi Simon, 1887 — Namibia, South Africa
  • U. semilimbata Simon, 1910 — Namibia, South Africa
  • U. septemnotata Tucker, 1920 — Namibia, South Africa
  • U. septempunctata (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872) — Israel
  • U. sudanensis Benoit, 1966 — Sudan, Somalia, Yemen
  • U. thaleri Rheims, Santos & van Harten, 2007 — Turkey, Israel, Iran, Yemen, India
  • U. yunlingensis Z. Z. Yang & Zhao, 2019 — China
  • U. galloprovincialis Gourret, 1887 — Palaeogene Aix-en-Provence Limestone

Urocteana

Urocteana Roewer, 1961

Uroecobius

Uroecobius Kullmann & Zimmermann, 1976

Zamilia

Zamilia Wunderlich, 2008[2] - †Retrooecobiinae

  • Z. aculeopectens Wunderlich, 2015 — Cretaceous Burmese amber
  • Z. antecessor Wunderlich, 2008 (type) — Cretaceous Burmese amber
  • Z. quattuormammillae Wunderlich, 2015 — Cretaceous Burmese amber

References

  1. "Family: Oecobiidae Blackwall,1862". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2021. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2021-02-08.
  2. Behrensmeyer, A. K.; Turner, A. (2013). "Taxonomic occurrences of Suidae recorded in the Paleobiology Database". Fossilworks. Retrieved 17 December 2021.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article List_of_Oecobiidae_species, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.