Biology:Pandava laminata

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Short description: Species of spider

Pandava laminata
Pandava.laminata.female.-.tanikawa.jpg
Female
Scientific classification edit
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Titanoecidae
Genus: Pandava
Species:
P. laminata
Binomial name
Pandava laminata
(Thorell, 1878)[1]
Synonyms[1]
  • Syrorisa mumfordi Amaurobius taprobanicola
  • Amaurobius laminatus Thorell, 1878
  • Simon, 1893 Strand, 1907
  • Amaurobius chinesicus Titanoeca birmanica
  • Strand, 1907 Berland, 1933
  • Amaurobius castaneiceps Thorell, 1895
  • Reimoser, 1927 Titanoeca fulmeki

Padava laminata is a species of araneomorph spider in the family Titanoecidae. It is widely distributed from East Africa through China to New Guinea and the Marquesas Islands.

Description

Pandava laminata has a brownish body and legs with a much paler abdomen and darker brown chelicerae (fangs). Males have more varied colouring than females, with darker brown around the head area and yellowish brown on the sternum as well as on the second to fourth pairs of legs. Females range from about 6–8 mm in total body length, males being slightly smaller at about 5.5–6 mm. Like all titanoecids, males have a complex projection (apophysis) on the tibia of their palps, with three main parts (lobes). In Pandava laminata males the lobe closest to the spider's mouth (the prolateral lobe) is undivided and short. The female epigyne is semi-circular; the anterior rims are longer than their distance apart.[2]

Distribution

Padava laminata is native to Tanzania, Kenya, Madagascar , Sri Lanka through China to New Guinea and the Marquesas Islands. It has been introduced to Germany and Hungary.[1] In Germany it was discovered for the first time at Cologne Zoo. The species was most likely introduced with plants or cargo from Southeast Asia.[3]

References

External links

Wikidata ☰ Q2322756 entry