Huttonia

Family of spiders From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Huttoniidae is a family of ecribellate[2] araneomorph spiders containing a single genus, Huttonia, itself containing a single described species, Huttonia palpimanoides. It is known only from New Zealand.[1]

Phylum:Arthropoda
Subphylum:Chelicerata
Class:Arachnida
Order:Araneae
Quick facts Conservation status, Scientific classification ...
Huttonia
Temporal range: Cretaceous–present
male Huttonia sp.

Naturally Uncommon (NZ TCS)
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Huttoniidae
Forster & Platnick, 1984
Genus: Huttonia
O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1879[1]
Species:
H. palpimanoides
Binomial name
Huttonia palpimanoides
Distribution (green; click to enlarge)
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Very few specimens of the genus were known until it was discovered that they primarily inhabited dead fronds of rainforest ferns.[3]

Taxonomy

It was first described by Octavius Pickard-Cambridge in 1880.[4][1] Originally placed with the ant spiders (Zodariidae), it was moved to a family of its own, Huttoniidae, in 1984, in the superfamily Palpimanoidea.[5]

Fossils of this family have been found in Cretaceous (Campanian) amber from Alberta and Manitoba, Canada. This extended the known geological age of the Huttoniidae back about 80 million years, supporting the theory of H. palpimanoides being an ousted relict species.[6] They are probably most closely related to the now extinct family, Spatiatoridae.

Although only one species is described, about twenty more undescribed species are thought to exist.[7]

Conservation status

Under the New Zealand Threat Classification System, this species is listed as "Naturally Uncommon" with the qualifier of "Range Restricted".[8]

References

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