Oreoneta is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by C. Chyzer & Władysław Kulczyński in 1894.
via Wikidata · CC0
Oreoneta is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by C. Chyzer & Władysław Kulczyński in 1894.
==Species== it contains thirty species: Oreoneta alpina (Eskov, 1987) – Russia Oreoneta arctica (Holm, 1960) – Russia (mainland, Kurile Is.), USA (Alaska) Oreoneta banffkluane Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Canada Oreoneta beringiana Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia (mainland, Kurile Is.), USA (Alaska), Canada Oreoneta brunnea (Emerton, 1882) – USA, Canada Oreoneta eskimopoint Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – USA, Canada, Greenland Oreoneta eskovi Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia, Kazakhstan Oreoneta fennica Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Finland Oreoneta fortyukon Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – USA (Alaska), Canada Oreoneta frigida (Thorell, 1872) (type) – Greenland to Norway Oreoneta garrina (Chamberlin, 1949) – USA, Canada Oreoneta herschel Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Canada Oreoneta intercepta (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1873) – Russia Oreoneta kurile Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia (Kurile Is.) Oreoneta leviceps (L. Koch, 1879) – Russia (Europe, Siberia), USA (Alaska), Canada Oreoneta logunovi Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia Oreoneta magaputo Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia, Canada Oreoneta mineevi Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia Oreoneta mongolica (Wunderlich, 1995) – Mongolia Oreoneta montigena (L. Koch, 1872) – Germany, Switzerland, Italy to Slovakia, Bulgaria Oreoneta punctata (Tullgren, 1955) – Sweden, Finland, Russia Oreoneta repeater Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Canada Oreoneta sepe Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Canada Oreoneta sinuosa (Tullgren, 1955) – Norway, Sweden, Finland, Russia Oreoneta tatrica (Kulczyński, 1915) – Central Europe Oreoneta tienshangensis Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Kazakhstan, China Oreoneta tuva Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia Oreoneta uralensis Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – Russia (Europe, Siberia, Far East) Oreoneta vogelae Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – USA Oreoneta wyomingia Saaristo & Marusik, 2004 – USA, Canada
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).