<documentID-DOI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.925.39691"ID-GBIF-Dataset="bd72aac6-9c05-4ca2-bfc8-dbf5dc462aa4"ID-PMC="PMC7160194"ID-Pensoft-Pub="1313-2970-925-1"ID-Pensoft-UUID="DCC1953545B9557EA73102AE6D25711F"ID-PubMed="32317852"ID-ZooBank="BB966609087849A1B13C138C2495E6B7"ModsDocID="1313-2970-925-1"checkinTime="1586365656080"checkinUser="pensoft"docAuthor="Maddison, Wayne P., Maddison, David R., Derkarabetian, Shahan & Hedin, Marshal"docDate="2020"docId="46E57CD3239F5A1CB655A2C9FDAB8F2B"docLanguage="en"docName="ZooKeys 925: 1-54"docOrigin="ZooKeys 925"docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.925.39691"docTitle="Sittisax ranieri"docType="treatment"docVersion="5"id="DCC1953545B9557EA73102AE6D25711F"lastPageNumber="1"masterDocId="DCC1953545B9557EA73102AE6D25711F"masterDocTitle="Sitticine jumping spiders: phylogeny, classification, and chromosomes (Araneae, Salticidae, Sitticini)"masterLastPageNumber="54"masterPageNumber="1"pageNumber="1"updateTime="1732479024238"updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
<mods:namePartid="D62AE2209072296ADAA0E74502B752E3">Maddison, Wayne P.</mods:namePart>
<mods:affiliationid="304BC9922579B51233CA72C769CA2EE4">Departments of Zoology and Botany and Beaty Biodiversity Museum, University of British Columbia, 6270 University Boulevard, Vancouver, British Columbia, V 6 T 1 Z 4, Canada</mods:affiliation>
<mods:namePartid="58323B5BF3307002633112C09CF6943B">Maddison, David R.</mods:namePart>
<mods:affiliationid="B0465FF50680A2BA86B65691B3C80623">Department of Integrative Biology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR 97331, USA</mods:affiliation>
<mods:affiliationid="A116D7BC45323D0579419FD2645E11DA">Department of Biology, San Diego State University, San Diego, CA 92182, USA & Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge MA 02138, USA</mods:affiliation>
<taxonomicNameid="C9977AD3D372E86504B4102FED15FF8A"ID-CoL="6YSQ4"LSID="46E57CD3-239F-5A1C-B655-A2C9FDAB8F2B"authority="(Peckham & Peckham, 1909)"baseAuthorityName="Peckham & Peckham"baseAuthorityYear="1909"class="Arachnida"family="Salticidae"genus="Sittisax"higherTaxonomySource="CoL"kingdom="Animalia"lsidName="Sittisax ranieri"order="Araneae"pageId="0"pageNumber="1"phylum="Arthropoda"rank="species"species="ranieri">Sittisax ranieri (Peckham & Peckham, 1909)</taxonomicName>
<figureCitationid="E0505388EB7B20C7C4E2662AD79875AE"captionStart="Figures 89–103"captionStartId="F8"captionText="Figures 89 - 103. Sitticines of Canada: the Jollas - Tomis clade, represented by the genera Attinella and Sittisax 89 - 93 Attinella concolor: 89 palp (Florida, Gainesville) 90, 91 ventral view of epigyne, dorsal view of cleared vulva (Florida, Gainesville) 92 male (Texas, 30.10, - 97.25) 93 female (Texas, 30.10, - 97.25) 94 - 98 Attinella dorsata: 94 palp (California, San Diego County) 95, 96 ventral view of epigyne, dorsal view of cleared vulva (British Columbia, Nanaimo) 97 male (California, Siskiyou County) 98 female (British Columbia, 48.870, - 123.379) 99 - 103 Sittisax ranieri: 99 palp (Northwest Territories, Tuktoyaktuk) 100, 101 ventral view of epigyne, dorsal view of cleared vulva (Nunavut, Baffin Island) 102 male (Saskatchewan, 55.27, - 105.19) 103 female (Ontario, Old Woman Bay)."figureDoi="10.3897/zookeys.925.39691.figures89-103"httpUri="https://binary.pensoft.net/fig/397990"pageId="0"pageNumber="1">Figures 99-103</figureCitation>
<taxonomicNameid="F176C35DF555A5575FE4F61E95FFA3A0"authorityName="Peckham & Peckham"authorityYear="1909"class="Arachnida"family="Salticidae"genus="Sittacus"higherTaxonomySource="CoL"kingdom="Animalia"lsidName="Sittacus ranieri"order="Araneae"pageId="0"pageNumber="1"phylum="Arthropoda"rank="species"species="ranieri">Sittacus ranieri</taxonomicName>
<taxonomicNameid="23CDAAE1CB0ED65A759AFF4CB9BD1EEE"baseAuthorityName="Peckham & Peckham"baseAuthorityYear="1909"class="Arachnida"family="Salticidae"genus="Sittisax"higherTaxonomySource="CoL"kingdom="Animalia"lsidName="Sittisax ranieri"order="Araneae"pageId="0"pageNumber="1"phylum="Arthropoda"rank="species"species="ranieri">
is a widespread boreal species, which in North America follows the high elevations of the Western Cordillera to the south, living on rocks and litter. It is dark in colour, large-bodied, and with distinctive genitalia.