Ballus
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Ballus | ||||||||||||||||
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subadult male B. chalybeius
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Scientific classification | ||||||||||||||||
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Diversity | ||||||||||||||||
10 species | ||||||||||||||||
Type species | ||||||||||||||||
Aranea chalybeia Walckenaer, 1802 |
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Species | ||||||||||||||||
see text |
Ballus is a spider genus of the Salticidae family (jumping spiders).
Contents |
[edit] Description
Ballus are typically small, squat spiders. The carapace is broad oval, almost as wide as long, flat on top with the sides and back almost vertical, and a rugose surface. The shield-shaped abdomen is broadly truncated at the front. Femora, patellae and tibiae on the first pair of legs are swollen in the male, and there is a fringe below the tibiae. Although they are often entirely mottled dark brown, some species are much more colorful.[1]
[edit] Distribution
This genus has mainly a palearctic distribution, but there are two species from Sri Lanka. Two species from the USA have been transferred to the genus Attidops[2]. B. tabupumensis was described from a single specimen from Burma, with no further information since 1914. Petrunkevitch's description is scant with schematic figures, and could refer to a related genus.[1]
[edit] Species
- Ballus armadillo (Simon, 1871) — Corsica, Italy
- Ballus chalybeius (Walckenaer, 1802) — Europe, North Africa to Central Asia
- Ballus japonicus Saito, 1939 — Japan
- Ballus lendli Kolosváry, 1934 — Hungary
- Ballus piger O. P-Cambridge, 1876 — Egypt
- Ballus rufipes (Simon, 1868) — Europe, North Africa
- Ballus segmentatus Simon, 1900 — Sri Lanka
- Ballus sellatus Simon, 1900 — Sri Lanka
- Ballus tabupumensis Petrunkevitch, 1914 — Burma
- Ballus variegatus Simon, 1876 — Portugal to Italy
[edit] Footnotes
[edit] References
- Murphy, Frances & Murphy, John (2000): An Introduction to the Spiders of South East Asia. Malaysian Nature Society, Kuala Lumpur.
- Platnick, Norman I. (2008): The world spider catalog, version 8.5. American Museum of Natural History.