From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This page lists all described
species of the spider family Oecobiidae accepted by the
World Spider Catalog as of January 2021
[update]:
[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 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
Platoecobius
Platoecobius Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935
† Retrooecobius
†
Retrooecobius Wunderlich, 2015
[2] - †Retrooecobiinae
Uroctea
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