Bijoaraneus
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| Bijoaraneus | |
|---|---|
| B. komachi from Taiwan | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
| Class: | Arachnida |
| Order: | Araneae |
| Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
| Family: | Araneidae |
| Genus: | Bijoaraneus Tanikawa, Yamasaki & Petcharad, 2021 |
| Type species | |
| Epeira mitifica Simon, 1886 | |
| Species | |
Bijoaraneus is a genus of orb-weaver spiders in the family Araneidae.[1] The genus was established in 2021 by Tanikawa, Yamasaki & Petcharad when they recognized that several species previously placed in Araneus formed a distinct evolutionary lineage.[2] As of September 2025[update], it contains five species distributed across Asia, Africa, and Australia.[1]
Description

Bijoaraneus spiders share several distinctive characteristics that distinguish them from other orb-weavers. The median ocular area is wider anteriorly than posteriorly. In males, the palpal femur has a basal tubercle and the tibia bears two macrosetae. Males also possess a lateral tooth on the endite, a ventral hook on coxa I along with a dorsal tubercle, and femur II has both a groove and a row of ventral spines.[2]
The opisthosoma is oval-shaped and longer than wide. Females have distinctive epigynes with short, well-sclerotized, inflexible scapes, without differentiation between the median plate and lateral lamella. Male palps lack a terminal apophysis, or when present, it is small and does not reach the conductor.[2]
Behavior
Like many orb-weavers, Bijoaraneus species construct circular webs, but with a distinctive missing sector - a free zone where no spiral threads are present. The silk is yellow in color. These spiders build their webs with a signal line that leads to a retreat constructed from a living leaf bound with silk, where the spider waits to detect prey. When prey becomes entangled in the web, vibrations travel along the signal line to alert the spider, which then rushes out to capture the prey.[2]
Distribution and habitat
The genus has a broad distribution across the Old World.[1] Species are found in Asia (including Japan, Korea, China, India, Thailand, and the Philippines), parts of Africa (Ghana and South Africa), and Australia.[1] They typically inhabit gardens, forests, and areas with abundant vegetation where they can build their webs and find suitable retreat sites among leaves.[2]