
Mughiphantes is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by Michael I. Saaristo & A. V. Tanasevitch in 1999.
GENUS
via GBIF
Mughiphantes is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by Michael I. Saaristo & A. V. Tanasevitch in 1999.
==Species== it contains sixty species: M. aculifer (Tanasevitch, 1988) – Russia M. afghanus (Denis, 1958) – Afghanistan M. alticola (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. anachoretus (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. ancoriformis (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. arlaudi (Denis, 1954) – France M. armatus (Kulczyński, 1905) – Central Europe M. baebleri (Lessert, 1910) – Alps (France, Italy, Switzerland, Austria, Slovenia) M. beishanensis Tanasevitch, 2006 – China M. bicornis Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal M. brunneri (Thaler, 1984) – Italy M. carnicus (van Helsdingen, 1982) – Italy M. cornutus (Schenkel, 1927) – Europe, Turkey, Russia (Europe to South Siberia), Kazakhstan M. cuspidatus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal M. edentulus Tanasevitch, 2010 – United Arab Emirates M. falxus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal M. faustus (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. hadzii (Miller & Polenec, 1975) – Austria, Slovenia M. handschini (Schenkel, 1919) – Central Europe M. hindukuschensis (Miller & Buchar, 1972) – Afghanistan M. ignavus (Simon, 1884) – France M. inermus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal M. jaegeri Tanasevitch, 2006 – China M. johannislupi (Denis, 1953) – France M. jugorum (Denis, 1954) – France M. lithoclasicola (Deltshev, 1983) – Bulgaria M. logunovi Tanasevitch, 2000 – Russia M. longiproper Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal M. martensi Tanasevitch, 2006 – China M. marusiki (Tanasevitch, 1988) – Russia, Mongolia M. merretti (Millidge, 1975) – Italy M. mughi (Fickert, 1875) (type) – Europe, Russia M. nigromaculatus (Zhu & Wen, 1983) – Russia, China M. numilionis (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. occultus (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. omega (Denis, 1952) – Romania M. ovtchinnikovi (Tanasevitch, 1989) – Kyrgyzstan M. pulcher (Kulczyński, 1881) – Central Europe M. pulcheroides (Wunderlich, 1985) – Italy M. pyrenaeus (Denis, 1953) – France M. restrictus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal M. rotundatus (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. rupium (Thaler, 1984) – Germany, Austria M. setifer (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. setosus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal M. severus (Thaler, 1990) – Austria M. sherpa (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal M. sobrioides Tanasevitch, 2000 – Russia M. sobrius (Thorell, 1871) – Norway (Svalbard), Russia (Europe, Siberia) M. styriacus (Thaler, 1984) – Austria M. suffusus (Strand, 1901) – Scandinavia, Russia M. taczanowskii (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1873) – Russia, Mongolia M. tienschangensis (Tanasevitch, 1986) – Central Asia M. triglavensis (Miller & Polenec, 1975) – Austria, Slovenia M. variabilis (Kulczyński, 1887) – Central Europe M. varians (Kulczyński, 1882) – Eastern Europe M. vittatus (Spassky, 1941) – Central Asia M. whymperi (F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1894) – Ireland, Britain, Scandinavia, Russia M. yadongensis (Hu, 2001) – China M. yeti (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal
via Wikidata · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).