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
Loxosceles blanda Gertsch & Ennik, 1983
Loxosceles blanda
Gertsch and Ennik 1983
: 298 [S], mf, desc. (figs 68-71, 97-101);
Jackman 1997
: 35, 168;
Vetter 2005
: 514;
Vetter 2008
: 152;
Vetter 2009
: 519;
Vetter 2015
: 75, 78, 83
Loxosceles unicolor
Keyserling, 1887;
Kunath and Smith 1968
: 51;
Reddell 1965
: 173;
Vogel 1970b
: 21 [part]
Loxosceles arizonicus
Gertsch and Mulaik, 1940;
Gertsch 1939b
: 24;
Vogel 1967
: 121;
Vogel 1970b
: 21 [West Texas records]
Loxosceles arizonica
Gertsch and Mulaik, 1940;
Gertsch 1958b
: 13 [some West Texas records]
Distribution.
Brewster, Crockett, Jeff Davis, Midland, Presidio, Terrell, Terry, Val Verde
Locality.
Big Bend National Park, Big Bend Ranch State Park, Chisos Basin, Chisos Mountains
Caves.
Terrell
(
Bendele's
Uncave);
Val Verde
(Oriente Milestone Molasses Bat Cave, Seminole Sink)
Time of activity.
Male (March - June, September - October); female (March, May, July, September - October)
Habitat.
(landscape features: cave, under [rock, rocks on trail]); (structures: in house)
Type.
Texas (male, Terrell Co., Sanderson, May 26, 1952, W. J. Gertsch, holotype, AMNH)
Etymology.
Latin, flattering
Collection.
MSU, NMSU, TAMU, TMM