Gnaphosa lapponum explained
Gnaphosa lapponum is a ground spider species found across heaths and heath-like terrain in alpine-subalpine zones of Europe (including Iceland) and Russia (European Russia to West Siberia).[1]
Appearance
Specimens have a brown prosoma and opisthosoma, with females larger than males, with respective body lengths of 8-10 mm for female specimens, and 7.5-8.3 mm for males.[1]
Former subspecies
Gnaphosa lapponum inermis was formerly considered a subspecies of Gnaphosa lapponum, but was fully synonymized with the nominate form of the species in 2019.[2] [3]
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Gloor . Daniel . Blick . Theo . Nentwig . Wolfgang . Kropf . Christian . Hänggi . Ambros . Kropf . C. . Gnaphosa lapponum . Spiders of Europe . 1 January 2024 . en . 10.24436/1 . 2024.
- Nentwig . Wolfgang . Blick . Theo . Gloor . Daniel . Jäger . Peter . Kropf . Christian . Tackling taxonomic redundancy in spiders: the infraspecific spider taxa described by Embrik Strand (Arachnida: Araneae) . Arachnologische Mitteilungen: Arachnology Letters . 13 September 2019 . 58 . 1 . 39 . 10.30963/aramit5809 . 1 January 2024. free .
- Web site: Gloor . Daniel . Nentwig . Wolfgang . Blick . Theo . Kropf . Christian . World Spider Catalog . Natural History Museum Bern . 1 January 2024 . en . 10.24436/2 . 2024.