Waitkera waitakerensis
Taxonavigation
editTaxonavigation: Uloboroidea |
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Superregnum: Eukaryota |
Familia: Uloboridae
Genus: Waitkera
Species: Waitkera waitakerensis
Name
edit- Waitkera waitakerensis (Chamberlain, 1946)
- Authority for current placement: Opell, 1979: 476
- undisputed by all subsequent authorities
- Incorrect subsequent spelling: Waitkera waitkerensis: Opell, 1979: 476
- Obsolete combination: Tangaroa waitakerensis
- Original combination: Uloborus waitakerensis
- Original genus: Uloborus
- Original status: valid species
- Primary type: holotype
- Type locality: 'Watershed Reserve, Waitakere hills, Auckland'
- Authority for current placement: Opell, 1979: 476
References
editPrimary references
edit- Chamberlain, G. 1946: Revision of the Araneae of New Zealand. Part II. Records of the Auckland Institute and Museum, 3(2): 85–97. [Publication date: '28 February 1946', sourced from title page of volume] BUGZ [first availability, see p. 90 and figs. 1-4]
Additional references
edit- Opell, B.D. 1979: Revision of the genera and tropical American species of the spider family Uloboridae. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, 148(10): 443–549. [Publication date: '27 August 1979', sourced from title page of issue] BHL [see p. 476 and figs. 23-31, map 1]
- Opell, B.D. 1992: Web-monitoring force exerted by the spider Waitkera waitakerensis (Uloboridae). Journal of arachnology, 20(2): 146–147. JSTOR PDF
- Opell, B.D. 2006: Molecular phylogenetic evidence for the parallel evolution of rock ecomorphs in the New Zealand orb-weaving spider Waitkera waitakerensis (family Uloboridae). Journal of arachnology, 34(2): 467–475. DOI: 10.1636/04-94.1 JSTOR PDF
- Opell, B.D.; Berger, A.M.; Shaffer, R.S. 2007: The body size of the New Zealand orb-weaving spider Waitkera waitakerensis (Uloboridae) is directly related to temperature and affects fecundity. Invertebrate biology, 126(2): 183–190. DOI: 10.1111/j.1744-7410.2007.00088.x
- A comparison of capture thread and architectural features of deinopoid and araneoid orb-webs.
- How spider anatomy and thread configuration shape the stickiness of cribellar prey capture threads.