Langelurillus horrifer

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Phylum:Arthropoda
Subphylum:Chelicerata
Class:Arachnida
Order:Araneae
Langelurillus horrifer
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Salticidae
Genus: Langelurillus
Species:
L. horrifer
Binomial name
Langelurillus horrifer
Rollard & Wesołowska, 2002

Langelurillus horrifer is a species of jumping spider that lives in the Guinea Highlands. A member of the genus Langelurillus, the female was first described in 2002 and the male in 2025. It is a small brown spider that measures between 2.4 and 4.8 mm (0.094 and 0.189 in) in length. It is generally toothless, although some male specimen have very small signs of a tooth. The female of the species is distinguished from similar spiders, like Langelurillus difficilis, by its complicated epigyne, the external visible part of its copulatory organs, with its long spiralling seminal ducts. The male is almost indistinguishable from its relatives, only the shape of its tibial apophyses, with their small thorn-like spikes, helping to identify it.

Langelurillus horrifer is a jumping spider, a member of the family Salticidae, that was first described by the arachnologists Christine Rollard and Wanda Wesołowska in 2002.[1] It was one of over 500 species identified by Wesołowska during her career.[2] They allocated it to the genus Langelurillus, which had been raised by Maciej Próchniewicz in 1994.[3][4][5]

Langelurillus is related to Aelurillus and Langona but the spiders are smaller and, unlike these genera and Phlegra, they lack the parallel stripes on the back of the body that is feature of the majority of these spiders.[6] In 2015, Wayne Maddison placed the genus in the subtribe Aelurillina, which also contained Aelurillus, Langona and Phlegra, in the tribe Aelurillini, within the subclade Saltafresia in the clade Salticoida.[7] In 2016, Jerzy Prószyński placed the same genera in a group named Aelurillines based on the shape of the spiders' copulatory organs.[8] The species is named after a Latin word that means "terrible" and relates to the complicated structure of its epigyne, the external visible part the female's copulatory organs.[9]

Description

Distribution

References

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