词条 | Deinopidae |
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| image = Deinopis-and-web-taiwan.jpg | image_caption = Deinopis sp. with web | taxon = Deinopidae | authority = C. L. Koch, 1850 | diversity_link = List of Deinopidae species | diversity = 2 genera, 61 species | diversity_ref = [1]| range_map = Distribution.deinopidae.1.png | subdivision_ranks = Genera | subdivision =
}} The spider family Deinopidae consists of stick-like elongate spiders that build unusual webs that they suspend between the front legs. When prey approaches, the spider will stretch the net to two or three times its relaxed size and propel itself onto the prey, entangling it in the web. Because of this, they are also called net-casting spiders. Their excellent night-vision adapted posterior median eyes allow them to cast this net over potential prey items. These eyes are so large in comparison to the other six eyes that the spider seems to have only two eyes. The genus Deinopis is the best known in this family. Spiders in this genus are also called ogre-faced spiders, due to the imagined similarity between their appearance and that of the mythological creature, the ogre. They are distributed nearly worldwide in the tropics, from Australia to Africa and the Americas. In Florida, Deinopis often hangs upside-down from a silk line under palmetto fronds during the day. It emerges at night to practice its unusual prey capture method on invertebrate prey. Its eyes are able to gather available light more efficiently than the eyes of cats and owls, and are able to do this despite the lack of a reflective layer (tapetum lucidum); instead, each night, a large area of light-sensitive membrane is manufactured within the eyes, and since arachnid eyes do not have irises, it is rapidly destroyed again at dawn.[2] The genus Menneus is also known as "humped-back spider". The entire family is cribellate.[3] Genera
Two genera formerly included in this family, Avella O. P-Cambridge, 1877 and Avellopsis Purcell, 1904, are now placed in Menneus.[4] See also
References{{Wikispecies|Deinopidae}}1. ^{{citation|title=Currently valid spider genera and species |work=World Spider Catalog |publisher=Natural History Museum Bern |url=http://www.wsc.nmbe.ch/statistics/ |accessdate=2015-09-28 |deadurl=yes |archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20151103044611/http://www.wsc.nmbe.ch/statistics/ |archivedate=2015-11-03 |df= }} {{Araneae}}{{Taxonbar|from=Q10033}}2. ^{{cite web |url=https://australianmuseum.net.au/learn/animals/spiders/how-spiders-see-the-world/ |publisher=Australian Museum |title=How spiders see the world |date=2018-11-16 |accessdate=2019-01-21}} 3. ^Coddington, J.A. & Levi, H.W. (1991). Systematics and Evolution of Spiders (Araneae). Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 22:565-592 {{DOI|10.1146/annurev.es.22.110191.003025}} 4. ^{{citation |title=Gen. Menneus Simon, 1876 |work=World Spider Catalog |publisher=Natural History Museum Bern |url=http://www.wsc.nmbe.ch/genus/706/Menneus |accessdate=2015-09-28 }} 3 : Deinopidae|Araneomorphae families|Taxa named by Carl Ludwig Koch |
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