Centromerus is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by David B. Hirst in 1886.
via Wikidata · CC0
Centromerus is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by David B. Hirst in 1886.
==Species== it contains eighty-eight species and two subspecies: C. abditus Gnelitsa, 2007 – Ukraine, Russia (Europe) C. acutidentatus Deltshev, 2002 – Balkans C. albidus Simon, 1929 – Europe, Turkey C. amurensis Eskov & Marusik, 1992 – Russia (South Siberia to Far East) C. andrei Dresco, 1952 – Spain C. andriescui Weiss, 1987 – Romania C. anoculus Wunderlich, 1995 – Madeira C. arcanus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1873) – Greenland, Europe, Russia (Europe to Middle Siberia) C. balazuci Dresco, 1952 – France C. bonaeviae Brignoli, 1979 – Italy (Sardinia) C. brevipalpus (Menge, 1866) (type) – Europe, Kazakhstan C. bulgarianus (Drensky, 1931) – Bulgaria C. capucinus (Simon, 1884) – Europe, Caucasus C. cavernarum (L. Koch, 1872) – Europe C. chappuisi Fage, 1931 – Romania C. cinctus (Simon, 1884) – France (Corsica), Algeria, Tunisia C. clarus (L. Koch, 1879) – Russia (Europe to Far East) C. cornupalpis (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1875) – USA, Canada C. corsicus (Simon, 1910) – France (Corsica) C. cottarellii Brignoli, 1979 – Italy C. dacicus Dumitrescu & Georgescu, 1980 – Romania, Serbia C. denticulatus (Emerton, 1909) – USA C. desmeti Bosmans, 1986 – Morocco, Algeria, Spain (Majorca) C. dilutus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1875) – Europe C. europaeus (Simon, 1911) – Portugal, Spain, France, Algeria, Balkans C. fuerteventurensis Wunderlich, 1992 – Canary Is. C. furcatus (Emerton, 1882) – USA, Canada C. gatoi Ballarin & Pantini, 2020 – Italy C. gentilis Dumitrescu & Georgescu, 1980 – Romania C. hanseni Ballarin & Pantini, 2020 – Italy C. ictericus (Simon, 1929) – France C. incilium (L. Koch, 1881) – Europe, Russia (Europe to West Siberia) C. isaiai Bosmans, 2015 – France (mainland, Corsica), Italy (Sardinia) C. lakatnikensis (Drensky, 1931) – Hungary, Serbia, Macedonia, Bulgaria, Greece C. latidens (Emerton, 1882) – USA, Canada C. laziensis Hu, 2001 – China C. leruthi Fage, 1933 – Europe C. levitarsis (Simon, 1884) – Europe, Russia (Europe to South Siberia) C. longibulbus (Emerton, 1882) – USA C. marciai Bosmans & Gasparo, 2015 – Italy (Sardinia) C. mariannae Slowik, 2018 – Canada, USA C. milleri Deltshev, 1974 – Bulgaria C. minor Tanasevitch, 1990 – Turkey, Caucasus (Russia, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan) C. minutissimus Merrett & Powell, 1993 – Britain, Germany C. nurgush Tanasevitch & Esyunin, 2013 – Russia (Europe) C. obenbergeri Kratochvíl & Miller, 1938 – Montenegro C. obscurus Bösenberg, 1902 – Central Europe C. pabulator (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1875) – Europe C. pacificus Eskov & Marusik, 1992 – Russia (South Siberia to Far East) C. paradoxus (Simon, 1884) – Western Mediterranean C. pasquinii Brignoli, 1971 – Italy C. persimilis (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1912) – Europe C. persolutus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1875) – USA, Canada C. petrovi Dimitrov & Deltshev, 2019 – Turkey C. phoceorum Simon, 1929 – Portugal, Spain, France, Madeira, Algeria, Tunisia C. piccolo Weiss, 1996 – Germany C. ponsi Lissner, 2016 – Spain (Balearic Is.) C. pratensis Gnelitsa & Ponomarev, 2010 – Russia (Europe) C. prudens (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1873) – Europe, North Africa Centromerus p. electus (Simon, 1884) – France C. puddui Brignoli, 1979 – Italy (Sardinia) C. qinghaiensis Hu, 2001 – China C. qingzangensis Hu, 2001 – China C. remotus Roewer, 1938 – Indonesia (Moluccas) C. satyrus (Simon, 1884) – France C. sellarius (Simon, 1884) – Europe, Russia (Europe to South Siberia) C. semiater (L. Koch, 1879) – Europe, Russia (Europe to Middle Siberia) C. serbicus Deltshev, 2002 – Serbia C. serratus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1875) – Europe C. setosus Miller & Kratochvíl, 1940 – Slovakia C. sexoculatus Wunderlich, 1992 – Madeira C. silvicola (Kulczyński, 1887) – Central Europe to Balkans and Ukraine C. sinuatus Bosmans, 1986 – Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia C. sinus (Simon, 1884) – Spain, France C. subalpinus Lessert, 1907 – Alps (France, Switzerland, Italy, Germany, Austria, Slovenia) C. subcaecus Kulczyński, 1914 – Europe C. succinus (Simon, 1884) – Western Mediterranean C. sylvaticus (Blackwall, 1841) – North America, Europe, Turkey, Russia (Europe to Far East), China, Korea, Japan Centromerus s. paucidentatus Deltshev, 1983 – Bulgaria C. tennapex (Barrows, 1940) – USA C. terrigenus Yaginuma, 1972 – Russia (Sakhalin, Kurile Is.), Japan C. timidus (Simon, 1884) – Spain, Romania C. tongiorgii Ballarin & Pantini, 2020 – Italy C. tridentinus Caporiacco, 1952 – Italy C. trilobus Tao, Li & Zhu, 1995 – China C. truki Millidge, 1991 – Caroline Is. C. unicolor Roewer, 1959 – Turkey C. ussuricus Eskov & Marusik, 1992 – Russia (Far East) C. valkanovi Deltshev, 1983 – Bulgaria, Greece, Turkey C. variegatus Denis, 1962 – Madeira
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).