Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Sason (spider)

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Class
  
Arachnida

Infraorder
  
Mygalomorphae

Phylum
  
Arthropoda

Subphylum
  
Chelicerata

Order
  
Araneae

Family
  
Barychelidae

Rank
  
Genus

Sason (spider) httpsd1k5w7mbrh6vq5cloudfrontnetimagescache

Similar
  
Hypochilus thorelli, Phryganoporus candidus, Oonops domesticus, Callobius claustrarius

Sason is a genus of mygalomorph bark-dwelling trapdoor spiders of the family Barychelidae. It is distributed from the Seychelles through India to northern Australia. The closest related genus seems to be the monotypic Paracenobiopelma.

Contents

Description

The small (five to ten millimeters long), compact, stout-legged spiders of the subfamily Sasoninae resemble those of the family Migidae in general appearance. Spiders of the genus Sason are strongly patterned. The males particularly have many short bristles on the glabrous carapace.

Taxonomy

The genus was erected by Octavius Pickard-Cambridge in 1883 for the species Sarpedon robustum. However, Eugène Simon discovered that the genus name Sarpedon was already preoccupied for a genus of beetles, and in 1887 proposed the replacement name Sason. Both Sason, an abbreviation of the biblical name Samson, and the earlier name based on Sarpedon, a legendary king at the siege of Troy, allude to the regal appearance of these spiders.

Species

As of March 2016, the World Spider Catalog accepted the following species:

  • Sason andamanicum (Simon, 1888) — Andaman Islands
  • Sason colemani Raven, 1986 — Queensland
  • Sason hirsutum Schwendinger, 2003 — Indonesia
  • Sason maculatum (Roewer, 1963) — Mariana Islands, Caroline Islands
  • Sason pectinatum Kulczynski, 1908 — New Guinea
  • Sason rameshwaram Siliwal & Molur, 2009 — India
  • Sason robustum (O. P.-Cambridge, 1883) — India, Sri Lanka, Seychelles
  • Sason sechellanum Simon, 1898 — Seychelles
  • Sason sundaicum Schwendinger, 2003 — Thailand, Malaysia
  • Distribution

    Most Sason species are endemic to rather small areas. Two factors are believed to have contributed to the distribution pattern of Sason. For one, some are found on small islands that emerged from the ocean floor in recent geological times, without ever having been connected to the mainland. These were likely inhabited by pregnant females surviving in floating logs. However, most of the speciation is believed to have occurred due to fragmentation of the former supercontinent Gondwana.

    References

    Sason (spider) Wikipedia