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Cerbalus aravaensis

Species of spider


Summary

Species of spider

Cerbalus aravaensis is a huntsman spider found in the southern Arava Valley of Israel and Jordan. The species was first described by Gershom Levy of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in 2007, though news agencies later reported it in 2010 as a new discovery (with a slightly different spelling) by a team of biologists from the University of Haifa. The spider has a leg-span of 14 cm, making it the largest member of the family Sparassidae in the Middle East. Males have a body length of 1.85 -, while females' body length is 2.20 -.

Habitat

Cerbalus aravaensis lives in sand dunes, and partly stable sands at the edge of salt-marshes. It is nocturnal and is most-active in the hotter summer months. It constructs underground dens with hinged, trap-door-like operculum made of sand and silk, in order to disguise the entrance from predators.

Conservation

The Sands of Samar, the last remaining sand dunes in the southern Arava region of Israel and home to Cerbalus aravaensis, are disappearing. The sands once covered as many as 7 km2, but now cover less than 3 km2 due to re-zoning of areas for agriculture and sand quarries. Mining projects on the sands are intended to be renewed in the near future and thus the habitat's future is uncertain. Should the Sands of Samar be destroyed, it is unlikely that Cerbalus aravaensis would survive.

References

References

  1. (15 August 2007). "''Calommata'' (Atypidae) and new spider species (Araneae) from Israel". Magnolia Press.
  2. Platnick, Norman I.. (10 December 2011). "Fam. Sparassidae". [[American Museum of Natural History]].
  3. (January 14, 2010). "Haifa U discovers new spider species". [[Israel 21c]].
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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