New State Records and Additions to the Alien Terrestrial Arthropod Fauna in the Hawaiian Islands
Author
Matsunaga, Janis N.
Author
Howarth, Francis G.
Author
Kumashiro, Bernarr R.
text
Proceedings of the Hawaiian Entomological Society
2019
51
1
1
71
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.10832895
0073-134X
10832895
Hogna crispipes
(L. Koch)
New island record
This species was first listed from Kahului in 2002 as
Lycosa
sp. A
and provisionally considered native (
Howarth and Preston 2002
); however, the form of the male pedipalp is closer to extra-limital species of
Hogna
rather than the native Hawaiian wolf spiders.
Hogna
is the largest genus of wolf spiders with a nearly world-wide distribution.
The Maui
specimen proved to be the same species as an adventive species found on Kauai and Oahu, which was recently identified by V. Framenau as
H. crispipes
(L. Koch, 1877)
. This species is widespread in
Australia
and many Pacific islands (Framenau et al. 2006).
Collection records: KAUAI,
Lihue
,
21°58’52”N
, 159°22’16”,
23.IX.1997
, coll.
D. Jameson
,
1 female
;
Kahili Mountain
Park, near
Koloa
,
800 ft.
elev.,
21°56’12’’N
;
159°28’45’’W
,
8.II.1998
, spotlighting on lawn, coll.
J.W. Berry
,
2 males
,
4 females
,
10 juv.
;
Same
data except:
10.III.1998
, lab reared,
1 male
.
OAHU
,
Kunia
,
Village Park
,
8.X.1988
, coll.
A. Manning
,
1 female
;
Kahaluu
,
1.XI.1993
, in yard, no coll.,
1 male
;
Kaneohe
, near
Valley of Temples
,
3.XII.1993
, outside house, coll.
I. Santos Bear
,
1 female
with spiderlings. Det. V. Framenau.