Palliduphantes is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by Michael I. Saaristo & A. V. Tanasevitch in 2001.
Palliduphantes is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by Michael I. Saaristo & A. V. Tanasevitch in 2001.
==Species== it contains seventy-four species: P. altus (Tanasevitch, 1986) – Central Asia P. alutacius (Simon, 1884) – Europe P. angustiformis (Simon, 1884) – France (incl. Corsica), Italy (Sardinia) P. antroniensis (Schenkel, 1933) – Europe P. arenicola (Denis, 1964) – France, Switzerland P. baeumeri Wunderlich, 2020 – Canary Is. P. banderolatus Barrientos, 2020 – Morocco P. bayrami Demir, Topçu & Seyyar, 2008 – Turkey P. bigerrensis (Simon, 1929) – France P. bolivari (Fage, 1931) – Portugal, Spain, Gibraltar P. brignolii (Kratochvíl, 1978) – Croatia P. byzantinus (Fage, 1931) – Italy, Romania, Bulgaria, Macedonia, Greece, Turkey P. cadiziensis (Wunderlich, 1980) – Portugal, Spain, Gibraltar, Morocco P. carusoi (Brignoli, 1979) – Italy (Sicily) P. cebennicus (Simon, 1929) – France P. ceretanus (Denis, 1962) – France P. cernuus (Simon, 1884) – France, Spain P. chenini Bosmans, 2003 – Tunisia P. conradini (Brignoli, 1971) – Italy P. constantinescui (Georgescu, 1989) – Romania P. corfuensis (Wunderlich, 1995) – Greece P. corsicos (Wunderlich, 1980) – France (Corsica) P. cortesi Ribera & De Mas, 2003 – Spain P. culicinus (Simon, 1884) – France, Switzerland P. dentatidens (Simon, 1929) – France, Italy P. elburz Tanasevitch, 2017 – Iran P. eleonorae (Wunderlich, 1995) – Greece P. epaminondae (Brignoli, 1979) – Greece P. ericaeus (Blackwall, 1853) – Europe, Russia P. fagei (Machado, 1939) – Spain P. fagicola (Simon, 1929) – France P. florentinus (Caporiacco, 1947) – Italy P. garganicus (Caporiacco, 1951) – Italy P. gladiola (Simon, 1884) – France (incl. Corsica) P. gypsi Ribera & De Mas, 2003 – Spain P. insignis (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1913) – Europe P. intirmus (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Russia, Central Asia P. istrianus (Kulczyński, 1914) – Eastern Europe P. kalaensis (Bosmans, 1985) – Algeria P. khobarum (Charitonov, 1947) – Greece, Turkey, Ukraine, Russia, Central Asia P. labilis (Simon, 1913) – Algeria, Tunisia P. ligulifer (Denis, 1952) – Romania P. liguricus (Simon, 1929) – Europe P. longiscapus (Wunderlich, 1987) – Canary Is. P. longiseta (Simon, 1884) – France (Corsica), Italy P. lorifer (Simon, 1907) – Spain P. malickyi (Wunderlich, 1980) – Greece (Crete) P. margaritae (Denis, 1934) – France P. melitensis (Bosmans, 1994) – Malta P. milleri (Starega, 1972) – Poland, Slovakia, Romania, Ukraine P. minimus (Deeleman-Reinhold, 1986) – Cyprus P. montanus (Kulczyński, 1898) – Germany, Austria, Italy, Turkey P. oredonensis (Denis, 1950) – France P. pallidus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1871) (type) – Europe P. palmensis (Wunderlich, 1992) – Canary Is. P. petruzzielloi Bosmans & Trotta, 2021 – Italy P. pillichi (Kulczyński, 1915) – Central to south-eastern Europe P. rubens (Wunderlich, 1987) – Canary Is. P. salfii (Dresco, 1949) – Italy P. sanctivincenti (Simon, 1872) – France P. sbordonii (Brignoli, 1970) – Iran P. schmitzi (Kulczyński, 1899) – Madeira, Azores P. solivagus (Tanasevitch, 1986) – Kyrgyzstan P. spelaeorum (Kulczyński, 1914) – SE Europe (Balkans) P. stygius (Simon, 1884) – Portugal, Spain, France, Azores P. tenerifensis (Wunderlich, 1992) – Canary Is. P. theosophicus (Tanasevitch, 1987) – Nepal P. tricuspis Bosmans, 2006 – Algeria P. trnovensis (Drensky, 1931) – Serbia, Montenegro, Macedonia, Bulgaria P. vadelli Lissner, 2016 – Spain (Majorca) P. yakourensis Bosmans, 2006 – Algeria P. zaragozai (Ribera, 1981) – Spain
via Wikidata sitelinks · CC0
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).