Spider taxonomy#Table of families

{{short description|Science of naming, defining and classifying spiders}}

File:Araneus-angulatus-figure1757.jpg from Svenska Spindlar of 1757, the first major work on spider taxonomy]]

Spider taxonomy is the part of taxonomy that is concerned with the science of naming, defining and classifying all spiders, members of the Araneae order of the arthropod class Arachnida, which has more than 52,700 described species.{{sfnp|World Spider Catalog|2025|loc=[http://wsc.nmbe.ch/statistics/ Currently valid spider genera and species]}}{{sfnp|Dimitrov|Hormiga|2021}} However, there are likely many species that have escaped the human eye as well as specimens stored in collections waiting to be described and classified. It is estimated that only one-third to one half of the total number of existing species have been described.{{sfnp|Platnick|Raven|2013|p=600}}

Arachnologists divide spiders into two suborders with about 136 families {{As of|lc=yes|2025|2}}.

Due to constant research, with new species being discovered every month and others being recognized as synonyms, the number of species in the families is bound to change and only reflects the present state of knowledge. Nevertheless, the species numbers given here are useful as a guideline – see the table of families at the end of the article.

History

Spider taxonomy can be traced to the work of Swedish naturalist Carl Alexander Clerck, who in 1757 published the first binomial scientific names of some 67 spiders species in his Svenska Spindlar ("Swedish Spiders"), one year before Linnaeus named over 30 spiders in his Systema Naturae. In the ensuing 250 years, thousands more species have been described by researchers around the world, yet only a dozen taxonomists are responsible for more than one-third of all species described. The most prolific authors include Eugène Simon of France, Norman Platnick and Herbert Walter Levi of the United States, Embrik Strand of Norway, and Tamerlan Thorell of Sweden, each having described well over 1,000 species.{{sfnp|Platnick|Raven|2013|p=597}}

Overview of phylogeny

At the very top level, there is broad agreement on the phylogeny and hence classification of spiders, which is summarized in the cladogram below. The three main clades into which spiders are divided are shown in bold; {{as of|2015|lc=yes}}, they are usually treated as one suborder, Mesothelae, and two infraorders, Mygalomorphae and Araneomorphae, grouped into the suborder Opisthothelae.{{sfnp|Bond|Garrison|Hamilton|Godwin|2014}}{{sfnp|Coddington|2005}} The Mesothelae, with about 194 species in 8 genera {{as of|2025|February|lc=yes}}, make up a very small proportion of the total of around 52,750 known species. Mygalomorphae species comprise around 7% of the total, the remaining 93% being in the Araneomorphae.Species counts from {{Harvtxt|World Spider Catalog|2025|loc=[http://wsc.nmbe.ch/statistics/ Currently valid spider genera and species]}}, family classification from {{Harvtxt|Coddington|2005|p=20}}.

{{clade |style=line-height:100%;

|label1=Araneae (spiders)

|1={{clade

|1=Mesothelae

|2={{clade

|label1=Opisthothelae

|1={{clade

|1=Mygalomorphae

|2={{clade

|label1=Araneomorphae

|1={{clade

|1=Austrochiloidea

|2=Entelegynae

|3=Haplogynae

|4=Hypochiloidea

}}

}}

}}

}}

}}

}}

The Araneomorphae are divided into two main groups: the Haplogynae and the Entelegynae. The Haplogynae make up about 10% of the total number of spider species, the Entelegynae about 83%. The phylogenetic relationships of the Haplogynae, Entelegynae and the two smaller groups Hypochiloidea and Austrochiloidea remain uncertain {{as of|2015|lc=yes}}. Some analyses place both Hypochiloidea and Austrochiloidea outside Haplogynae;{{sfnp|Coddington|2005|p=20}} others place the Austrochiloidea between the Haplogynae and the Entelegynae;{{sfnp|Griswold|Ramirez|Coddington|Platnick|2005}}{{sfnp|Blackledge|Scharff|Coddington|Szüts|2009|p=5232}} the Hypochiloidea have also been grouped with the Haplogynae.{{sfnp|Bond|Garrison|Hamilton|Godwin|2014|p=1766}} Earlier analyses regarded the Hypochiloidea as the sole representatives of a group called the Paleocribellatae, with all other araneomorphs placed in the Neocribellatae.{{sfnp|Coddington|Levi|1991|p=577}}

The Haplogynae are a group of araneomorph spiders with simpler male and female reproductive anatomy than the Entelegynae. Like the mesotheles and mygalomorphs, females have only a single genital opening (gonopore), used both for copulation and egg-laying;{{sfnp|Eberhard|Huber|2010|pp=256–257}} males have less complex palpal bulbs than those of the Entelegynae.{{sfnp|Eberhard|Huber|2010|p=250}} Although some studies based on both morphology and DNA suggest that the Haplogynae form a monophyletic group (i.e. they comprise all the descendants of a common ancestor),{{sfnp|Coddington|2005|p=22}}{{sfnp|Bond|Garrison|Hamilton|Godwin|2014|p=1766}} this hypothesis has been described as "weakly supported", with most of the distinguishing features of the group being inherited from ancestors shared with other groups of spiders, rather than being clearly indicative of a separate common origin (i.e. being synapomorphies).{{sfnp|Michalik|Ramírez|2014|p=312}} One phylogenetic hypothesis based on molecular data shows the Haplogynae as a paraphyletic group leading to the Austrochilidae and Entelegynae.{{sfnp|Agnarsson|Coddington|Kuntner|2013|p=40}}

The Entelegynae have a more complex reproductive anatomy: females have two "copulatory pores" in addition to the single genital pore of other groups of spiders; males have complex palpal bulbs, matching the female genital structures (epigynes).{{sfnp|Coddington|2005|p=22}} The monophyly of the group is well supported in both morphological and molecular studies. The internal phylogeny of the Entelegynae has been the subject of much research. Two groups within this clade contain the only spiders that make vertical orb webs: the Deinopoidea are cribellate – the adhesive properties of their webs are created by packets of thousands of extremely fine loops of dry silk; the Araneoidea are ecribellate – the adhesive properties of their webs are created by fine droplets of "glue". In spite of these differences, the webs of the two groups are similar in their overall geometry.{{sfnp|Hormiga|Griswold|2014|p=488}} The evolutionary history of the Entelegynae is thus intimately connected with the evolutionary history of orb webs. One hypothesis is that there is a single clade, Orbiculariae, uniting the orb web makers, in whose ancestors orb webs evolved. A review in 2014 concluded that there is strong evidence that orb webs evolved only once, although only weak support for the monophyly of the Orbiculariae.{{sfnp|Hormiga|Griswold|2014|p=505}} One possible phylogeny is shown below; the type of web made is shown for each terminal node in order of the frequency of occurrence.{{sfnp|Blackledge|Scharff|Coddington|Szüts|2009|loc=Fig. 3}}

{{clade

|label1=Entelegynae

|1={{clade

|1=Eresoidea, RTA clade – no web; substrate-defined web|state1=double

|label2=Orbiculariae

|2={{clade

|1=Deinopoideaorb web

|2={{clade

|1=Araneoideaorb web; aerial sheet web; cobweb; no web

|2=Nicodamidaeaerial sheet web

}}

}}

}}

}}

If this is correct, the earliest members of the Entelegynae made webs defined by the substrate on which they were placed (e.g. the ground) rather than suspended orb webs. True orb webs evolved once, in the ancestors of the Orbiculariae, but were then modified or lost in some descendants.

An alternative hypothesis, supported by some molecular phylogenetic studies, is that the Orbiculariae are paraphyletic, with the phylogeny of the Entelegynae being as shown below.{{sfnp|Bond|Garrison|Hamilton|Godwin|2014|loc=Fig 3|ps=. Web types defined as {{Harvtxt|Blackledge|Scharff|Coddington|Szüts|2009|loc=Fig. 3}}}}

{{clade

|label1=Entelegynae

|1={{clade

|1=Araneoideaorb web; aerial sheet web; cobweb; no web

|2={{clade

|1=Deinopoidea, Oecobiidaeorb web; substrate-defined web

|2=RTA clade – no web; substrate-defined web

}}

}}

}}

On this view, orb webs evolved earlier, being present in the early members of the Entelegynae, and were then lost in more groups,{{sfnp|Bond|Garrison|Hamilton|Godwin|2014|p=1768}} making web evolution more convoluted, with different kinds of web having evolved separately more than once.{{sfnp|Hormiga|Griswold|2014|p=505}} Future advances in technology, including comparative genomics studies,{{sfnp|Dimitrov|Hormiga|2021}} and whole-genome sampling should lead to "a clearer image of the evolutionary chronicle and the underlying diversity patterns that have resulted in one of the most extraordinary radiations of animals".{{sfnp|Hormiga|Griswold|2014|p=505}}

Suborder Mesothelae

{{unreferenced section|date=September 2015}}

Mesothelae resemble the Solifugae ("wind scorpions" or "sun scorpions") in having segmented plates on their abdomens that create the appearance of the segmented abdomens of these other arachnids. They are both few in number and also limited in geographical range.

Image:Sphodros rufipes non-crossing chel.jpg that shows the nearly perfectly vertical orientation of the fangs, a prime characteristic of the Mygalomorphae.]]

Suborder Opisthothelae

{{unreferenced section|date=September 2015}}

Suborder Opisthothelae contains the spiders that have no plates on their abdomens. Opisthothelae is divided into two infraorders, Mygalomorphae and Araneomorphae, which can be distinguished by the orientation of their fangs. It can be somewhat difficult on casual inspection to determine whether the fang orientation would classify a spider as a mygalomorph or araneomorph. The spiders that are called "tarantulas" in English are so large and hairy that inspection of their fangs is hardly necessary to categorize one of them as a mygalomorph. Other, smaller, members of this suborder, however, look little different from the araneomorphs. (See the picture of Sphodros rufipes below.) Many araneomorphs are immediately identifiable as such since they are found on webs designed for the capture of prey or exhibit other habitat choices that eliminate the possibility that they could be mygalomorphs.

=Infraorder Mygalomorphae=

Image:Megaphobema robustum 1.jpg, one of the many kinds of spiders called "tarantulas"]]

Spiders in infraorder Mygalomorphae are characterized by the vertical orientation of their fangs and the possession of four book lungs.

=Infraorder Araneomorphae=

File:Cheiracanthium punctorium frei 1 17 Forst Jungfernhdeide Jg 46 070920.jpg

Most, if not all, of the spiders one is likely to encounter in everyday life belong to infraorder Araneomorphae. It includes a wide range of spider families, including the orb-weaver spiders that weave their distinctive webs in gardens, the cobweb spiders that frequent window frames and the corners of rooms, the crab spiders that lurk on flowers waiting for nectar- and pollen-gathering insects, the jumping spiders that patrol the outside walls of buildings, and so on. They are characterized by having fangs whose tips approach each other as they bite, and (usually) having one pair of book lungs.

Classification above families

Spiders were long classified into families that were then grouped into superfamilies, some of which were in turn placed into a number of higher taxa below the level of infraorder. When more rigorous approaches, such as cladistics, were applied to spider classification, it became clear that most of the major groupings used in the 20th century were not supported. Many were based on shared characteristics inherited from the ancestors of multiple clades (plesiomorphies), rather than being distinct characteristics originating in the ancestors of that clade only (apomorphies). According to Jonathan A. Coddington in 2005, "books and overviews published prior to the last two decades have been superseded".{{sfnp|Coddington|2005|p=24}} Listings of spiders, such as the World Spider Catalog, currently ignore classification above the family level.{{sfnp|Coddington|2005|p=24}}{{sfnp|World Spider Catalog|2025}}

At the higher level, the phylogeny of spiders is now often discussed using informal clade names, such as the "RTA clade",{{sfnp|Hormiga|Griswold|2014|p=491}} the "Oval Calmistrum" clade or the "Divided Cribellum" clade.{{sfnp|Ramírez|2014|p=4}} Older names previously used formally are used as clade names, e.g. Entelegynae and Orbiculariae.{{sfnp|Hormiga|Griswold|2014|pp=490–491}}

Table of families

class="wikitable"

|+Key

Generabgcolor="lightblue" | 1bgcolor="lightgreen" | ≥2bgcolor="#FFA" | ≥10bgcolor="pink" | ≥100
Speciesbgcolor="lightblue" | 1–9bgcolor="lightgreen" | ≥10bgcolor="#FFA" | ≥100bgcolor="pink" | ≥1000

class="wikitable"

|+Spider families{{refn|group=note|name=Note2|Unless otherwise shown, currently accepted families and counts based on the World Spider Catalog version 25.5 {{as of|lc=yes|2025|February|8}}.{{sfnp|World Spider Catalog|2025|loc=[http://wsc.nmbe.ch/statistics/ Currently valid spider genera and species]}} In the World Spider Catalog, "species" counts include subspecies. Assignment to sub- and infraorders based on {{Harvtxt|Coddington|2005|p=20}} (when given there).}}

Family||Genera||Species||Common name||Example
colspan=5|Mesothelae
Liphistiidae
(including Heptathelidae)
bgcolor="lightgreen"|8bgcolor="#FFA"|194segmented spidersKimura spider
colspan=5|Opisthothelae: Mygalomorphae
Actinopodidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|3bgcolor="#FFA"|125Missulena bradleyi (Eastern mouse spider)
Anamidaebgcolor="#FFA"|10bgcolor="#FFA"|143Aname diversicolor (black wishbone spider)
Antrodiaetidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|4bgcolor="lightgreen"|37folding trapdoor spidersAtypoides riversi
Atracidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|3bgcolor="lightgreen"|38Australian funnel-web spidersAtrax robustus (Sydney funnel-web spider)
Atypidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|3bgcolor="lightgreen"|56purseweb spidersSphodros rufipes (red-legged purseweb spider)
Barychelidaebgcolor="#FFA"|39bgcolor="#FFA"|284brushed trapdoor spidersSason sundaicum
Bemmeridaebgcolor="lightgreen"|4bgcolor="lightgreen"|50Spiroctenus personatus
Ctenizidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightblue"|5cork-lid trapdoor spidersCteniza sauvagesi
Cyrtaucheniidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|6bgcolor="#FFA"|109wafer-lid trapdoor spiders
Dipluridaebgcolor="lightgreen"|8bgcolor="#FFA"|146curtain-web spidersDiplura lineata
Entypesidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|7bgcolor="lightgreen"|41Entypesa andohahela
Euagridaebgcolor="#FFA"|14bgcolor="lightgreen"|87Euagrus formosanus
Euctenizidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|8bgcolor="lightgreen"|78Aptostichus simus
Halonoproctidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|6bgcolor="#FFA"|141Bothriocyrtum californicum (California trapdoor spider)
Hexathelidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|7bgcolor="lightgreen"|45(Australian) funnel-web spidersHexathele hochstetteri
Hexurellidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|8Hexurella pinea
Idiopidaebgcolor="#FFA"|23bgcolor="#FFA"|446armored trapdoor spidersIdiosoma nigrum (black rugose trapdoor spider)
Ischnothelidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|5bgcolor="lightgreen"|26Ischnothele caudata
Macrothelidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|55Macrothele calpeiana (Spanish funnel-web spider)
Mecicobothriidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|2dwarf tarantulas or sheet funnel-web spidersMecicobothrium thorelli
Megahexuridaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|1Megahexura fulva
Microhexuridaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|2Microhexura montivaga (Spruce-fir moss spider)
Microstigmatidaebgcolor="#FFA"|11bgcolor="lightgreen"|38Envia garciai
Migidaebgcolor="#FFA"|11bgcolor="#FFA"|104tree trapdoor spidersCalathotarsus simoni
Nemesiidaebgcolor="#FFA"|10bgcolor="#FFA"|188Aname atra (black wishbone spider)
Paratropididaebgcolor="lightgreen"|4bgcolor="lightgreen"|26baldlegged spidersParatropis tuxtlensis
Porrhothelidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|5Porrhothele antipodiana (black tunnelweb spider)
Pycnothelidaebgcolor="#FFA"|15bgcolor="#FFA"|140Stanwellia hoggi
Rhytidicolidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|15Fufius lucasae
Stasimopidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightgreen"|56Stasimopus mandelai
Theraphosidaebgcolor="pink"|172bgcolor="pink"|1133tarantulasTheraphosa blondi (Goliath birdeater)
colspan=5|Opisthothelae: Araneomorphae
Agelenidaebgcolor="#FFA"|97bgcolor="pink"|1420araneomorph funnel-web spidersHobo spider (Eratigena agrestis)
Amaurobiidaebgcolor="#FFA"|26bgcolor="#FFA"|202tangled nest spidersCallobius claustrarius
Anapidaebgcolor="#FFA"|59bgcolor="#FFA"|233Holarchaea novaeseelandiae
Ancylometidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightgreen"|11
Anyphaenidaebgcolor="#FFA"|58bgcolor="#FFA"|649anyphaenid sac spidersHibana velox (yellow ghost spider)
Araneidaebgcolor="pink"|198bgcolor="pink"|3144orb-weaver spidersZygiella x-notata
Archaeidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|6bgcolor="lightgreen"|93pelican spidersMadagascarchaea gracilicollis
Archoleptonetidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightblue"|8Archoleptoneta gertschi
Arkyidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|38
Austrochilidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightblue"|9Tasmanian cave spider (Hickmania troglodytes)
Caponiidaebgcolor="#FFA"|21bgcolor="#FFA"|153Diploglena capensis
Cheiracanthiidaebgcolor="#FFA"|15bgcolor="#FFA"|376Cheiracanthium mildei'
Cicurinidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|4bgcolor="#FFA"|172
Cithaeronidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightblue"|9
Clubionidaebgcolor="#FFA"|18bgcolor="#FFA"|667sac spidersClubiona trivialis
Corinnidaebgcolor="#FFA"|76bgcolor="#FFA"|876dark sac spidersCastianeira sp.
Ctenidaebgcolor="#FFA"|48bgcolor="#FFA"|605wandering spidersPhoneutria fera
Cyatholipidaebgcolor="#FFA"|23bgcolor="lightgreen"|58
Cybaeidaebgcolor="#FFA"|23bgcolor="#FFA"|301Cryphoeca silvicola
Cycloctenidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|8bgcolor="lightgreen"|80
Deinopidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|3bgcolor="lightgreen"|68net-casting spidersAsianopis subrufa (rufous net-casting spider)
Desidaebgcolor="#FFA"|63bgcolor="#FFA"|323intertidal spidersPhryganoporus candidus
Dictynidaebgcolor="#FFA"|51bgcolor="#FFA"|460Nigma walckenaeri
Diguetidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|16coneweb spiders
Dolomedidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|7bgcolor="#FFA"|128
Drymusidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|19false violin spiders
Dysderidaebgcolor="#FFA"|24bgcolor="#FFA"|653woodlouse hunter spidersWoodlouse spider (Dysdera crocata)
Eresidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|9bgcolor="#FFA"|106velvet spidersEresus sandaliatus
Filistatidaebgcolor="#FFA"|18bgcolor="#FFA"|192crevice weaversSouthern house spider (Kukulcania hibernalis)
Fonteferreidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|1
Gallieniellidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|5bgcolor="lightgreen"|41
Gnaphosidaebgcolor="pink"|153bgcolor="pink"|2479flat-bellied ground spidersDrassodes cupreus
Gradungulidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|8bgcolor="lightgreen"|18large-clawed spidersProgradungula carraiensis (Carrai cave spider)
Hahniidaebgcolor="#FFA"|29bgcolor="#FFA"|240dwarf sheet spiders
Hersiliidaebgcolor="#FFA"|16bgcolor="#FFA"|187tree trunk spidersHersilia savignyi
Homalonychidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|2
Huttoniidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|1Huttonia palpimanoides
Hypochilidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|33lampshade spidersHypochilus thorelli
Lamponidaebgcolor="#FFA"|23bgcolor="#FFA"|192White-tailed spider (Lampona spp.)
Leptonetidaebgcolor="#FFA"|22bgcolor="#FFA"|397Tooth Cave spider (Tayshaneta myopica)
Linyphiidaebgcolor="pink"|640bgcolor="pink"|4940dwarf / money spidersLinyphia triangularis
Liocranidaebgcolor="#FFA"|35bgcolor="#FFA"|354liocranid sac spiders
Lycosidaebgcolor="pink"|135bgcolor="pink"|2490wolf spidersLycosa tarantula
Macrobunidaebgcolor="#FFA"|26bgcolor="lightgreen"|92
Malkaridaebgcolor="#FFA"|13bgcolor="lightgreen"|57shield spiders
Mecysmaucheniidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|7bgcolor="lightgreen"|25
Megadictynidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightblue"|2
Mimetidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|8bgcolor="#FFA"|164pirate spidersOarces reticulatus
Miturgidaebgcolor="#FFA"|33bgcolor="#FFA"|191long-legged sac spiders
Myrmecicultoridaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|1
Mysmenidaebgcolor="#FFA"|17bgcolor="#FFA"|188spurred orb-weavers
Nesticidaebgcolor="#FFA"|16bgcolor="#FFA"|292cave cobweb spidersNesticella marapu
Nicodamidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|7bgcolor="lightgreen"|27
Ochyroceratidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|9bgcolor="#FFA"|184midget ground weaversTheotima minutissima
Oecobiidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|7bgcolor="#FFA"|129disc web spidersOecobius navus
Oonopidaebgcolor="pink"|115bgcolor="pink"|1962dwarf hunting spidersOonops domesticus
Orsolobidaebgcolor="#FFA"|30bgcolor="#FFA"|189
Oxyopidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|9bgcolor="#FFA"|448lynx spidersPeucetia viridans (green lynx spider)
Pacullidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|4bgcolor="lightgreen"|38
Palpimanidaebgcolor="#FFA"|20bgcolor="#FFA"|182palp-footed spiders
Penestomidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|9
Periegopidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|3
Philodromidaebgcolor="#FFA"|30bgcolor="#FFA"|527philodromid crab spidersPhilodromus dispar
Pholcidaebgcolor="#FFA"|97bgcolor="pink"|2029daddy long-legs spidersPholcus phalangioides
Phrurolithidaebgcolor="#FFA"|25bgcolor="#FFA"|410
Physoglenidaebgcolor="#FFA"|13bgcolor="lightgreen"|72
Phyxelididaebgcolor="#FFA"|14bgcolor="lightgreen"|68
Pimoidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|87Pimoa cthulhu
Pisauridaebgcolor="#FFA"|45bgcolor="#FFA"|236nursery web spidersPisaura mirabilis
Plectreuridaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|32
Prodidomidaebgcolor="#FFA"|24bgcolor="#FFA"|195
Psechridaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|62
Psilodercidaebgcolor="#FFA"|11bgcolor="#FFA"|224
Salticidaebgcolor="pink"|689bgcolor="pink"|6808jumping spidersZebra spider (Salticus scenicus)
Scytodidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|4bgcolor="#FFA"|253spitting spidersScytodes thoracica
Segestriidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|5bgcolor="#FFA"|181tubeweb spidersSegestria florentina
Selenopidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|9bgcolor="#FFA"|282wall spidersSelenops radiatus
Senoculidaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightgreen"|31
Sicariidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|3bgcolor="#FFA"|176recluse spidersBrown recluse (Loxosceles reclusa)
Sparassidaebgcolor="#FFA"|97bgcolor="pink"|1519huntsman spidersDelena cancerides (Avondale spider)
Stenochilidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|2bgcolor="lightgreen"|13
Stiphidiidaebgcolor="#FFA"|20bgcolor="#FFA"|125Tartarus mullamullangensis
Symphytognathidaebgcolor="#FFA"|10bgcolor="#FFA"|104dwarf orb-weaversPatu digua
Synaphridaebgcolor="lightgreen"|3bgcolor="lightgreen"|13
Synotaxidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|5bgcolor="lightgreen"|38
Telemidaebgcolor="#FFA"|16bgcolor="#FFA"|107long-legged cave spiders
Tetrablemmidaebgcolor="#FFA"|27bgcolor="#FFA"|153armored spiders
Tetragnathidaebgcolor="#FFA"|45bgcolor="#FFA"|989long jawed orb-weaversLeucauge venusta (orchard spider)
Theridiidaebgcolor="pink"|131bgcolor="pink"|2583cobweb spidersRedback spider (Latrodectus hasselti)
Theridiosomatidaebgcolor="#FFA"|22bgcolor="#FFA"|150ray spidersTheridiosoma gemmosum
Thomisidaebgcolor="pink"|170bgcolor="pink"|2169crab spidersMisumena vatia (goldenrod crab spider)
Titanoecidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|5bgcolor="lightgreen"|67Goeldia obscura
Toxopidaebgcolor="#FFA"|14bgcolor="lightgreen"|82
Trachelidaebgcolor="#FFA"|29bgcolor="#FFA"|300
Trachycosmidaebgcolor="#FFA"|20bgcolor="#FFA"|148
Trechaleidaebgcolor="#FFA"|17bgcolor="#FFA"|136
Trochanteriidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|6bgcolor="lightgreen"|52
Trogloraptoridaebgcolor="lightblue"|1bgcolor="lightblue"|1Trogloraptor marchingtoni
Udubidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|6bgcolor="lightgreen"|57
Uloboridaebgcolor="#FFA"|19bgcolor="#FFA"|283hackled orb-weaversUloborus walckenaerius
Viridasiidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|3bgcolor="lightgreen"|14
Xenoctenidaebgcolor="lightgreen"|4bgcolor="lightgreen"|33
Zodariidaebgcolor="#FFA"|90bgcolor="pink"|1306Zodarion germanicum
Zoropsidaebgcolor="#FFA"|28bgcolor="#FFA"|186Zoropsis spinimana

Notes

{{reflist|group=note|refs=

}}

References

{{reflist|30em|refs=}}

Bibliography

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