Plexippoides is a genus of jumping spiders that was first described by Jerzy Prószyński in 1984. The name means "having the likeness of Plexippus"
GENUS
via GBIF · CC0
Plexippoides is a genus of jumping spiders that was first described by Jerzy Prószyński in 1984. The name means "having the likeness of Plexippus"
==Species== it contains twenty-six species, found in eastern Asia, though some are recorded from Africa and south-eastern Europe: Plexippoides annulipedis (Saito, 1939) – China, Korea, Japan Plexippoides arkit Logunov & Rakov, 1998 – Central Asia Plexippoides biprocessiger (Lessert, 1927) – Congo Plexippoides cornutus Xie & Peng, 1993 – China Plexippoides digitatus Peng & Li, 2002 – China Plexippoides dilucidus Próchniewicz, 1990 – Bhutan Plexippoides discifer (Schenkel, 1953) – China Plexippoides doenitzi (Karsch, 1879) – China, Korea, Japan Plexippoides flavescens (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1872) (type) – Sudan, Egypt, Middle East, Iran, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan. Introduced to Ukraine and Nevada, United States of America Plexippoides gestroi (Dalmas, 1920) – Greece, Cyprus, Turkey, Azerbaijan, Syria, Iraq, Iran Plexippoides guangxi (Peng & Li, 2002) – China Plexippoides insperatus Logunov, 2021 – Iran, Pakistan Plexippoides jinlini Yang, Zhu & Song, 2006 – China Plexippoides longapophysis Wang, Mi & Peng, 2020 – China Plexippoides longus Zhu, Zhang, Zhang & Chen, 2005 – China Plexippoides meniscatus Yang, Zhu & Song, 2006 – China Plexippoides nishitakensis (Strand, 1907) – Japan Plexippoides potanini Prószyński, 1984 – China Plexippoides regius Wesolowska, 1981 – Russia, China, Korea Plexippoides regiusoides Peng & Li, 2008 – China Plexippoides subtristis Wang, Mi & Peng, 2020 – China Plexippoides szechuanensis Logunov, 1993 – China Plexippoides tangi Wang, Mi & Peng, 2020 – China Plexippoides tristis Próchniewicz, 1990 – Nepal Plexippoides validus Xie & Yin, 1991 – China Plexippoides zhangi Peng, Yin, Yan & Kim, 1998 – China
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).