Asagena fulva (Keyserling, 1884)

Dean, David Allen, 2016, Catalogue of Texas spiders, ZooKeys 570, pp. 1-703 : 373

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.570.6095

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:CE0DA439-F6F6-4DCF-8225-5700A3C50098

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA84BF05-44F1-A860-53FA-797592B96D28

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Asagena fulva (Keyserling, 1884)
status

 

Asagena fulva (Keyserling, 1884)

Asagena fulva Wunderlich 2008: 199 [T]

Lithyphantes fulvus Keyserling, 1884; Comstock 1912: 362; Comstock 1940: 377, desc.; Fox 1940: 41; Marx 1890: 522; Milstead 1958: 446

Steatoda fulva (Keyserling, 1884); Agnew et al. 1985: 3; Gertsch 1960b: 45, mf, desc. (figs 62, 64-65, 70-71); Jackman 1997: 169; Kaston 1972: 119, desc.; Kaston 1978: 115, desc.; Levi 1957b: 391 [T], mf, desc. (figs 32-33, 45-47, 52); Levi and Randolph 1975: 41; Vogel 1970b: 24; Young and Edwards 1990: 23

Distribution.

Brewster, Brown, Colorado, Comanche, Culberson, Dallam, El Paso, Erath, Hidalgo, Howard, Hudspeth, Knox, Llano, Martin, Somervell, Starr, Wichita

Locality.

Black Gap Wildlife Management Area

Time of activity.

Male (March, July - September); female (July, September)

Habitat.

(crops: cotton, peanuts); (grass: grass); (nest/prey: stomach of Cnemidophorus tigris )

Method.

pitfall trap [mf]

Type.

Utah, Spring Lake

Etymology.

Latin, tawny-yellow

Collection.

MSU, TAMU

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Arachnida

Order

Araneae

Family

Theridiidae

Genus

Asagena