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قراءة كتاب The Common Spiders of the United States

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‏اللغة: English
The Common Spiders of the United States

The Common Spiders of the United States

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
الصفحة رقم: 2

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The Therididæ 107-133 Theridium 110 Steatoda 119 Pholcus 128 Scytodes 131 [Pg v][Pg vi]The Linyphiadæ 134-153 Linyphia 134 Erigone 148 The Epeiridæ 154-204 Round Webs of the Epeiridæ 155-159 Species of Epeira 160-181 The Three Species of the Genus Zilla 184 Acrosoma 188 Argiope 192-198 Tetragnatha 198-204 The Ciniflonidæ, or Cribellata 205-220 Dictyna 205 Amaurobius 213 Uloborus 216 Hyptiotes 218 Filistata 220

INTRODUCTION

This book is designed to make the reader acquainted with the common spiders most likely to be found over a large part of the United States as far south as Georgia and as far west as the Rocky Mountains. Local collections show that in the neighborhood of any city in the country there are at least three or four hundred species of spiders; but few such collections have been made, and it is not yet possible to tell all the kinds of spiders that live in any particular place, or how far any species extends over the country. The species which are here described and figured are all of them well known and have been described in other books. Rare and doubtful species are omitted, though some of these may in time prove to be among the most common. A large number of spiders are too small to be easily seen, and most of these are omitted, only a few representative species being described. Spiders have, unfortunately, no common names, except such indefinite ones as "the garden spider," "the black spider," "the jumping spider," and the like. Even "tarantula" has become only a nickname for any large spider. The names of spiders, like those of other animals, have been given to them independently by different persons, so that many of them have more than one name, and the more common the spider the larger the number of names. In this book only one name is usually given to each species, and the name used is one that has been published with a description of the species in some other well-known book. Readers who are interested in the names of species and in comparing the classifications of different naturalists are referred to a "Catalogue of the Described Araneæ Of Temperate North America," by George Marx, in the Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 1890, which is a useful index to what has been published on American spiders.

The front half of a spider's body, called the cephalothorax, contains in one piece the head and thorax, the only outward division between them being shallow grooves from the middle of the back to the front legs. In the middle of the cephalothorax is usually a groove or depression, under

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