New Species of Bertrana and Amazonepeira, Orb-Weaving Spiders from the Neotropics (Araneae: Araneidae). Levi, H. W. Transactions of the American Microscopical Society, 113(3):229--241, 1994.
Paper doi abstract bibtex Three new species of Bertrana, tiny orb-weavers, and three new species of Amazonepeira are described. Bertrana benuta comes from the coastal forest of southern Columbia, B. poa from the Ecuadorean Amazon region, and B. urahua from the Ecuadorean Andes. The new Amazonepeira, A. manaus, A. masaka, and A. beno all come from the Amazon region. Also, there are new Amazon records of the previously described A. herrera, and the male of Aculepeira carrara is matched to females belonging to Amazonepeira. The species differ in structures of the genitalia, which are illustrated.
@article{levi_new_1994,
title = {New {Species} of {Bertrana} and {Amazonepeira}, {Orb}-{Weaving} {Spiders} from the {Neotropics} ({Araneae}: {Araneidae})},
volume = {113},
issn = {0003-0023},
shorttitle = {New {Species} of {Bertrana} and {Amazonepeira}, {Orb}-{Weaving} {Spiders} from the {Neotropics} ({Araneae}},
url = {http://www.jstor.org/stable/3226619},
doi = {10.2307/3226619},
abstract = {Three new species of Bertrana, tiny orb-weavers, and three new species of Amazonepeira are described. Bertrana benuta comes from the coastal forest of southern Columbia, B. poa from the Ecuadorean Amazon region, and B. urahua from the Ecuadorean Andes. The new Amazonepeira, A. manaus, A. masaka, and A. beno all come from the Amazon region. Also, there are new Amazon records of the previously described A. herrera, and the male of Aculepeira carrara is matched to females belonging to Amazonepeira. The species differ in structures of the genitalia, which are illustrated.},
number = {3},
urldate = {2016-12-17TZ},
journal = {Transactions of the American Microscopical Society},
author = {Levi, Herbert W.},
year = {1994},
keywords = {Araneidae, Bertrana},
pages = {229--241}
}
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