Araneus
{{Short description|Genus of spiders}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| fossil_range = {{Fossil range|Cretaceous|present}}
| image = Araneus diadematus2.jpg
| image_caption = European garden spider (Araneus diadematus)
| image2 = Araneus quadratus MHNT.jpg
| image2_caption = Four-spot orb-weaver (Araneus quadratus)
| taxon = Araneus
| authority = Clerck, 1757
| diversity_link = List of Araneidae species: A#Araneus
| diversity = c. 650 species
| type_species = Araneus angulatus{{cite journal|author=ICZN|year=2009|title=OPINION 2224 (Case 3371). ARANEIDAE Clerck, 1758, Araneus Clerck, 1758 and Tegenaria Latreille, 1804 (Arachnida, Araneae): proposed conservation|journal=Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature|volume=66|issue=2|pages=192–193|doi=10.21805/bzn.v66i2.a9}}
| type_species_authority = Clerck, 1757
| range_map =
| subdivision_ranks = Species
| subdivision = See list.
| synonyms =
- Epeira Walckenaer, 1805
- Atea C.L. Koch, 1837
- Epira Agassiz, 1846 (Unj. Emend.)
- Amamrotypus Archer, 1951
- Cambridgepeira Archer, 1951
- Conaranea Archer, 1951
- Conepeira Archer, 1951
- Cathaistela Archer, 1958
- Neosconella F.O.P.-Cambridge, 1903
}}
Araneus is a genus of common orb-weaving spiders. It includes about 650 species, among which are the European garden spider and the barn spider. The genus was erected by Carl Alexander Clerck in 1757.
Description
File:Marbled_orbweaver,_Temagami,_Ontario.jpg), Temagami, Ontario]]
Spiders of this genus present perhaps the most obvious case of sexual dimorphism among all of the orb-weaver family, with males being normally {{frac|1|3}} to {{frac|1|4}} the size of females. In A. diadematus, for example, last-molt females can reach the body size up to 1 in (2.5 cm), while most males seldom grow over 0.3 in (1 cm), both excluding leg span. Males are differentiated from females by a much smaller and more elongated abdomen, longer legs, and the inability to catch or consume prey bigger than themselves.
In females, the epigyne has a long scape (a tongue-like appendage). Male pedipalps have a hook-like terminal apophysis. Abdominal tubercles are present anterolaterally.
Taxonomic history
Marbled orb-weaver ([[Araneus marmoreus)|thumb]]
Araneus was, for much of its history, called Epeira. The latter name is now considered a junior synonym of Araneus, as the latter was published almost 50 years earlier.
Epeira was first coined by Charles Athanase Walckenaer in 1805,Walckenaer, Charles Athanase (1805): Tableau des aranéides ou caractères essentiels des tribus, genres, familles et races que renferme le genre Aranea de Linné, avec la désignation des espèces comprises dans chacune de ces divisions. Paris. for a range of spiders now considered Araneidae (orb-weavers). Over time, a rather diverse set of spiders was grouped under this genus name, including species from the modern families Araneidae, Mimetidae (Mimetus syllepsicus described by Nicholas Marcellus Hentz in 1832), Tetragnathidae, Theridiidae, Theridiosomatidae (Theridiosoma gemmosum, described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in 1877 as Theridion gemmosum), Titanoecidae (Nurscia albomaculata, described by Hippolyte Lucas in 1846 as Epeira albo-maculata) and Uloboridae (Uloborus glomosus, described by Walckenaer in 1842 as Epeira glomosus).Platnick, Norman I. (2009): [http://research.amnh.org/entomology/spiders/catalog/index.html The World Spider Catalog], version 9.5. American Museum of Natural History. Epeira cylindrica O. P.-Cambridge, 1889 was at a time placed in the Linyphiidae and is considered incertae sedis, as is "Araneus" cylindriformis (Roewer, 1942).
Epeira was synonymized with the genus Aranea by William Elford Leach in 1815, and with Araneus by Eugène Simon in 1904, though this synonymy was not universally recognized.Bonnet, Pierre (1955): Bibliographia Araneorum. Vol. 2.
Throughout the 19th century, Epeira was used as a catch-all genus, similar to the once ubiquitous salticid genus Attus. However, from 1911, to its last mention in 1957, only very few authors continued to use the genus in their publications, notably Franganillo (1913, 1918), Hingston (1932), Kaston (1948), and Marples (1957). Chamberlin and Ivie published a new species, Epeira miniata, in 1944, which was rejected.
Jean-Henri Fabre refers to Argiope spiders as Epeira in his 1928 book The Life of the Spider (La Vie des araignées), within the family "Epeirae". James Henry Emerton also uses the genus Epeira in his 1902 book The Common Spiders of the United States, but refers to spiders mostly now considered Araneus. The popular 1893 book American Spiders and their Spinningwork by Henry Christopher McCook also uses Epeira extensively.
The short documentary Epeira diadema (1952) by Italian director Alberto Ancilotto was nominated for an Oscar in 1953. It is about the spider today known as Araneus diadematus.
Venom
Araneus spider venoms vary in toxicity, but often deliver a dry bite (8 of 10 occasions).{{Citation needed|date=November 2019}} Females bite more often than males, which would rather flee or feign death.
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
External links
{{Wikispecies|Araneus}}
{{Commons}}
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20060430143443/http://www.washington.edu/burkemuseum/spidermyth/images/trifolium.jpg Image of variations in A. trifolium] (from [https://web.archive.org/web/20090830023033/http://www.washington.edu/burkemuseum/spidermyth/myths/easy.html Spider myths])
- [http://www.forestryimages.org/browse/subimages.cfm?SUB=11514 Pictures of US Araneus species] (free for noncommercial use)
- [http://www.forestryimages.org/browse/subimages.cfm?SUB=13808 Pictures of A. trifolium] (free for noncommercial use)
{{Taxonbar|from=Q1413947}}
{{Authority control}}