From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Diaea
Genus of spiders
Genus of spiders
Diaea is a genus of crab spiders first described by Tamerlan Thorell in 1869. Most species are found in specific locations except for D. livens, which occurs in the United States and D. dorsata, which has a palearctic distribution. Adults are 5 mm to 7 mm and tend to hide in and around vegetation, especially flowers, where their color allows them to blend in to their surroundings.
Life style
They are found on trees, shrubs and grasses and very commonly sampled beating and sweeping vegetation.
Description
Females and males are 4 to 5 mm in total length, with males more slender than females and their legs longer.
The carapace can be white, yellow or green, sometimes darker around the eye region, with smooth integument bearing simple, isolated setae. The carapace is moderately convex above and armed with long setae. The lateral eyes are on tubercles. Both eye rows are recurved and almost the same length. The posterior median eyes are closer to each other than to posterior lateral eyes.
The abdomen is round in females and oval in males, white, yellow or green, and usually decorated with darker spots or markings. The legs are thin and slender, usually the same colour as the carapace, and sometimes banded.
Species
Diaea ambara 13466270.jpg|D. ambara Flower spider with moth02.jpg|D. evanida Diaea livens 2.jpg|female D. livens Diaea longisetosa 298602738 537885176.jpg|male D. longisetosa Diaea.subdola.female.1.-.tanikawa.jpg|female D. subdola
, this genus includes 46 species:
- Diaea albicincta Pavesi, 1883 – Ethiopia, Tanzania, South Africa
- Diaea albolimbata L. Koch, 1875 – New Zealand
- Diaea ambara (Urquhart, 1885) – New Zealand
- Diaea bengalensis Biswas & Mazumder, 1981 – India
- Diaea bipunctata Rainbow, 1902 – Vanuatu
- Diaea carangali Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 – Philippines
- Diaea delata Karsch, 1880 – Angola
- Diaea doleschalli Hogg, 1915 – Indonesia (New Guinea)
- Diaea dorsata (Fabricius, 1777) – Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Russia (Europe to Middle Siberia), Iran (type species)
- Diaea erji Chen, Liu & Hu, 2025 – China
- Diaea giltayi Roewer, 1938 – Indonesia (New Guinea)
- Diaea graphica Simon, 1882 – Yemen
- Diaea gyoja Ono, 1985 – Russia (Far East), Japan
- Diaea implicata Jézéquel, 1966 – Ivory Coast
- Diaea insignis Thorell, 1877 – Indonesia (Sulawesi)
- Diaea limbata Kulczyński, 1911 – Indonesia (New Guinea)
- Diaea livens Simon, 1876 – Southern and Central Europe, Turkey, Caucasus, Iran. Introduced to United States
- Diaea longisetosa Roewer, 1961 – Senegal, South Africa
- Diaea mikhailovi Zhang, Song & Zhu, 2004 – China
- Diaea mutabilis Kulczyński, 1901 – Ethiopia
- Diaea nakajimai Ono, 1993 – Madagascar
- Diaea ocellata Rainbow, 1898 – Papua New Guinea
- Diaea osmanii Zamani & Marusik, 2017 – Iran
- Diaea papuana Kulczyński, 1911 – Indonesia (New Guinea)
- Diaea placata O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1899 – Sri Lanka
- Diaea pougneti Simon, 1886 – India
- Diaea proclivis Simon, 1903 – Equatorial Guinea
- Diaea puncta Karsch, 1884 – Sub-Saharan Africa
- Diaea rohani Fage, 1923 – Angola, South Africa
- Diaea rufoannulata Simon, 1880 – New Caledonia
- Diaea semilutea Simon, 1903 – Equatorial Guinea
- Diaea seminola Gertsch, 1939 – United States
- Diaea septempunctata L. Koch, 1874 – Tonga, Papua New Guinea?
- Diaea shirleyi Hogg, 1922 – Vietnam
- Diaea sphaeroides (Urquhart, 1885) – New Zealand
- Diaea spiniformis (Yang, Zhu & Song, 2006) – China
- Diaea spinosa Keyserling, 1880 – Colombia
- Diaea subdola O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1885 – Pakistan, India, China, Russia (Far East), Korea, Japan
- Diaea suspiciosa O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1885 – Central Asia, Mongolia, China, India?
- Diaea tadtadtinika Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 – Philippines
- Diaea taibeli Caporiacco, 1949 – Kenya
- Diaea terrena Dyal, 1935 – Pakistan
- Diaea tianpingensis Liu, Zhang & Chen, 2021 – China
- Diaea tongatabuensis Strand, 1913 – Polynesia
- Diaea viridipes Strand, 1909 – South Africa
- Diaea zonura Thorell, 1892 – Indonesia (Sumatra, Java)
References
References
- "Genus Diaea". World Spider Catalog.
- (2020). "The Thomisidae of South Africa. Part 1 A-Mo. Version 1". South African National Survey of Arachnida Photo Identification Guide.
- "Crab spiders: Family Thomisidae". Spiders of Australia.
- Thorell, T.. (1869). "On European spiders. Part I. Review of the European genera of spiders, preceded by some observations on zoological nomenclature". Nova Acta Regiae Societatis Scientiarum Upsaliensis.
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.
Ask Mako anything about Diaea — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report