Atypus affinis

Atypus affinis
A. affinis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Suborder: Mygalomorphae
Family: Atypidae
Genus: Atypus
Species: Atypus affinis
Binomial name
Atypus affinis
Eichwald, 1830
Synonyms

Oletera atypus
Oletera atypa
Atypus anachoreta
Atypus blackwalli
Atypus bleodonticus
Atypus coriaceus
Atypus cedrorum

Wikispecies has information related to: Atypus affinis

The purseweb spider (Atypus affinis) is a common mygalomorph spider from Europe.

It is found in Europe (Netherlands, Germany) and southern England but ranging as far north as Southern Sweden and as far south as North Africa. Their hidden lifestyle makes it a rarely seen species. ÷It is the only British mygalomorph spider. The purse-web spider was previously known from Denmark, but as it hadn't been seen for 60 years despite persistent searching, it was considered extinct. In 1994, it was rediscovered in Jutland.[1]

These spiders are black or brownish and not particularly large; the males are about 7-9mm while the females are larger at 10-15mm. They look much like Atypus piceus, but spiderlings are often very lightly colored, and the three-part posterior spinnerets do not have a light blot. Like other mygalomorph spiders, it has fangs that point straight down rather than crossing.

This spider spins an unusual web. It creates a tube of silk that is hidden partially underground, with the portion above ground being covered in leaves and other debris. The spider waits for an insect to land or crawl onto the tube, then bites through the silk to pull the insect inside. These spiders usually do not leave their webs for any reason other than mating.

These spiders become sexually mature at about four years. Autumn is the mating season, when the male spiders will seek out a female spider and enter her burrow where they live together until the male dies soon after mating. The female lays her egg sac inside the tube and the spiderlings hatch out the following summer, remaining with their mother for nearly another year after that.

References

  1. New Danish spider. Natural History Museum of Denmark. University of Copenhagen ()

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, September 16, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.