Genus of spiders
Savignia is a genus of sheet weavers that was first described by John Blackwall in 1833. The name honors the French naturalist Marie Jules César Savigny .[ 4]
Species
As of May 2019[update] it contains twenty-three species, found in Europe , Africa , Asia , Oceania , the United States , on Comoros , in Western Australia , and Alaska :[ 1]
Savignia amurensis Eskov, 1991 – Russia
Savignia badzhalensis Eskov, 1991 – Russia
Savignia basarukini Eskov, 1988 – Russia
Savignia birostrum (Chamberlin & Ivie , 1947) – Russia, China, USA (Alaska)
Savignia borea Eskov, 1988 – Russia
Savignia bureensis Tanasevitch & Trilikauskas, 2006 – Russia
Savignia centrasiatica Eskov, 1991 – Russia
Savignia erythrocephala (Simon , 1908) – Australia (Western Australia)
Savignia eskovi Marusik, Koponen & Danilov, 2001 – Russia
Savignia frontata Blackwall, 1833 (type ) – Europe, Caucasus, Russia to Kazakhstan
Savignia fronticornis (Simon, 1884) – Mediterranean
Savignia harmsi Wunderlich, 1980 – Spain
Savignia kartalensis Jocqué, 1985 – Comoros
Savignia kawachiensis Oi, 1960 – Korea, Japan
Savignia naniplopi Bosselaers & Henderickx, 2002 – Greece (Crete)
Savignia producta Holm, 1977 – Scandinavia, Russia
Savignia pseudofrontata Paik, 1978 – Korea
Savignia rostellatra Song & Li, 2009 – China
Savignia saitoi Eskov, 1988 – Russia
Savignia superstes Thaler, 1984 – France
Savignia ussurica Eskov, 1988 – Russia
Savignia yasudai (Saito, 1986) – Japan
Savignia zero Eskov, 1988 – Russia
See also
References
^ a b c "Gen. Savignia Blackwall, 1833" . World Spider Catalog Version 20.0 . Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi :10.24436/2 . Retrieved 2019-06-23 .
^ Tanasevitch, A. V. (1985). "A study of spiders (Aranei) of the polar Urals". Trudy Zoologieskogo Instituta Akademija Nauk SSSR . 139 : 56.
^ Wunderlich, J. (1995). "Zur Taxonomie europäischer Gattungen der Zwergspinnen (Arachnida: Araneae: Linyphiidae: Erigoninae)". Beiträge zur Araneologie . 4 (1994): 648.
^ Blackwall, J. (1833). "Characters of some undescribed genera and species of Araneidae". London and Edinburgh Philosophical Magazine and Journal of Science . 3 (3): 436– 443.