Australian Biological Resources Study

Australian Faunal Directory

Lycosidae, or Wolf Spider

Lycosidae, or Wolf Spider

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Family LYCOSIDAE Sundevall, 1833


Compiler and date details

2011 - Helen Smith

R.J. McKay & R.J. Raven, Queensland Museum, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia

  • Lycosidae Sundevall, 1833.

 

Introduction

The wolf spiders are small to large, 3-clawed, ground-living, hunting spiders. Female lycosids carry the egg sac attached to the spinnerets and the young, after hatching, climb on the back of the female. Lycosids are found in a very wide range of habitats — under logs and stones, in litter, in grasslands, sand-dunes, beaches, on salt-lakes and claypans. Some do not construct retreats, others have simple or complex burrows with turrets of stones and twigs, leaf palisades or well-hinged trap-doors. Venonia Thorell, and probably Anomalosa Roewer, build small, horizontal sheet webs on the ground.

With a long history of species descriptions, many Australian wolf spiders have been misplaced in genera that may not actually occur in Australia. Ongoing revisions of the Australasian fauna are resulting in the disappearance of such names from the faunal list as species are transferred. Anoteropsis L. Koch is now known to be endemic to New Zealand (Vink 2002); see Mainosa Framenau for the species previously listed under Anoteropsis. Trabea australiensis L. Koch, 1877 was considered nomen dubium by Framenau (2002: 211), all other species of the genus occur in Africa and southern Europe. Australian species that have previously been listed under Schizocosa Chamberlin (or Avicosa Chamberlin & Ivie, in synonymy under Schizocosa) are now listed under Artoria Thorell and Artoriopsis Framenau (see Framenau, 2005, 2007).

 

Excluded Taxa

Misidentifications

LYCOSIDAE: Anoteropsis Koch, 1878

LYCOSIDAE: Avicosa Chamberlin & Ivie, 1942

LYCOSIDAE: Schizocosa Chamberlin, 1904

 

Diagnosis

Lycosidae are typically ground hunters but also build nests in low bushes. They have 3 claws, the eyes are in 2 or 3 rows with the eyes of the front row smaller than those of the back; the back row may be so strongly curved back as to form a third row, the retrocoxal hymen is present and a predistal tarsal fracture is absent, and the trochanters are all deeply notched. Trochanters notched. Colulus absent. Male palp without tibial apophysis.

 

History of changes

Note that this list may be incomplete for dates prior to September 2013.
Published As part of group Action Date Action Type Compiler(s)
06-Mar-2023 LYCOSIDAE Sundevall, 1833 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
22-Feb-2022 LYCOSIDAE Sundevall, 1833 17-Feb-2023 MODIFIED
15-Oct-2020 ARANEAE 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
05-Feb-2020 LYCOSIDAE Sundevall, 1833 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED Lyn Randall
02-Feb-2018 LYCOSIDAE Sundevall, 1833 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
15-Oct-2020 ARANEOMORPHAE 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
15-Oct-2020 ARANEOMORPHAE 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
14-Sep-2015 LYCOSIDAE Sundevall, 1833 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
15-Oct-2020 ARANEOMORPHAE 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED Dr Federica Turco Jurgen Otto
20-Mar-2014 LYCOSIDAE Sundevall, 1833 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
15-Oct-2020 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
15-Oct-2020 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
15-Oct-2020 06-Mar-2023 MODIFIED
12-Feb-2010 (import)