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Nephilingis cruentata

Nephilingis cruentata
Big spider in Mozambique.JPG
Female N. cruentata in Mozambique
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Araneidae
Genus: Nephilingis
Species: N. cruentata
Binomial name
Nephilingis cruentata
(Fabricius, 1775)
Nephilingis cruentata.png
Synonyms

Aranea cruentata
Epeira diadela
Epeira brasiliensis
Epeira azzara
Nephila genualis
Nephila borbonica mossambicensis
Nephila brasiliensis
Araneus diadelus
Nephila cruentata chiloangensis
Nephilengys cruentata


Aranea cruentata
Epeira diadela
Epeira brasiliensis
Epeira azzara
Nephila genualis
Nephila borbonica mossambicensis
Nephila brasiliensis
Araneus diadelus
Nephila cruentata chiloangensis
Nephilengys cruentata

Nephilingis cruentata is a araneid spider with a strikingly red sternum.

Females reach a length of about 24 mm. The legs can be uniformly dark red or brown, or annulated. Males are about 4 mm long.

The species was first described in 1775 by Johan Fabricius, as Araneus cruentata. In 1887, Eugène Simon transferred it to the genus Nephilengys. In 2013, Matjaž Kuntner et al. decided that four species of Nephilengys were sufficiently different to require an alternative generic placement. Accordingly they erected the genus Nephilingis with Nephilingis cruentata as the type species.

N. cruentata is found in tropical and subtropical Africa and several limited areas of South America (Brazil, northern Colombia and Paraguay), where it has probably been introduced by humans in the late 19th century at the latest.

The species name cruentata is derived from Latin cruentus "bloody", probably referring to the female red sternum.


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