Pancorius wesolowskae

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Pancorius wesolowskae
A spider of the Pancorius genus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Salticidae
Subfamily: Salticinae
Genus: Pancorius
Species:
P. wesolowskae
Binomial name
Pancorius wesolowskae
Wang & Wang, 2020

Pancorius wesolowskae is a species of jumping spider in the genus Pancorius that lives in China. The species was first described in 2020 by Wei-Hang Wang and Cheng Wang. The spider is large, measuring between 6.3 and 7.93 mm (0.248 and 0.312 in) in overall length. The carapace is dark brown and the opisthosoma dark grey with a pattern of light and dark. The female is larger than the male but otherwise very similar in colouration. The female spider is similar to Pancorius wangdicus but differs in have slit-shaped copulatory openings compared to the other species. The male has a blunter and shorter retrolateral tibial apophysis than the related Pancorius cadus.

Pancorius wesolowskae is a jumping spider that was first described by Wei-Hang Wang and Cheng Wang in 2020.[1] The species is named after the Polish arachnologist Wanda Wesołowska.[2] It was allocated to the genus Pancorius, which had been first described by Eugène Simon in 1894.[3] The genus is one of 32 in the subtribe Plexippina in the tribe Plexippini. The subtribe is similar to Wayne Maddison's idea of Plexippinae. The spiders are predominantly found in Afro-Eurasia, and hard to differentiate. For example, the genera Evarcha, Hyllus and Pancorius are very similar in many morphological respects except size.[4] Maddison listed the tribe in the clade Simonida.[5] In 2016, it had been grouped with eight other genera of jumping spiders under the name Evarchines, named after the related genus Evarcha, by Jerzy Prószyński.[6]

Description

Distribution and habitat

References

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