Catalogue of Texas spiders
Author
Dean, David Allen
Department of Entomology, Texas A & M University, College Station, Texas, United States of America
a-dean-ento@tamu.edu
text
ZooKeys
2016
2016-03-02
570
1
703
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.570.6095
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.570.6095
1313-2970-570-1
CE0DA439F6F64DCF82255700A3C50098
E376FF8EFFF1F22C326D1E0DFF8BFFDF
579094
Agelenopsis spatula Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935
Agelenopsis spatula
Agnew et al. 1985
: 4, 9;
Ayoub et al. 2005
: 45;
Chamberlin and Ivie 1935b
: 32, mf, desc. (fig. 109);
Chamberlin and Ivie 1941
: 596, mf, desc. (figs 6, 26, 32);
Jackman 1997
: 160;
Roewer 1955
: 43;
Vogel 1970b
: 2;
Whitman-Zai et al. 2015
: 21, mf, desc. (figs 13-14, 35, 50);
Yantis 2005
: 196;
Young and Edwards 1990
: 14
Agelena spathula
(Chamberlin & Ivie, 1935);
Bonnet 1955
: 201
Distribution.
Archer, Brazos, Briscoe, Clay, Dallam, Erath, Frio, Houston, Liberty, Roberts, Travis, Wichita, Williamson
Locality.
Caprock Canyons State Park, Lake Kickapoo
Time of activity.
Male (September - October); female (February, May, September - November)
Habitat.
(crops: peanuts); (grass: short grass); (littoral: rocks near water, under rock); (soil/woodland: on ground, pine woods [%: 88])
Method.
5 gallon bucket trap [f]; pitfall trap [mf]
Type.
Texas (male, Wichita Co., Wichita Falls, September 3, 1933, W. Ivie, holotype, AMNH)
Etymology.
Latin, spoon shaped palp
Collection.
DMNS, MCZ, MSU, TAMU