Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- PART I Introduction
- PART II Forest flora of eastern Africa
- PART III Forest fauna of eastern Africa
- 6 Biogeography of East African montane forest millipedes
- 7 The Linyphiid spider fauna (Araneae: Linyphiidae) of mountain forests in the Eastern Arc mountains
- 8 The montane butterflies of the eastern Afrotropics
- 9 Herpetofauna of the eastern African forests
- 10 The zoogeography of the montane forest avifauna of eastern Tanzania
- 11 Mammals in the forests of eastern Africa
- 12 Ecology of the Zanzibar red colobus monkey, Colobus badius kirkii (Gray, 1968), in comparison with other red colobines
- 13 The socioecology of interspecific associations among the monkeys of the Mwanihana rain forest, Tanzania: a biogeographic perspective
- PART IV Conservation
- Index
7 - The Linyphiid spider fauna (Araneae: Linyphiidae) of mountain forests in the Eastern Arc mountains
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 November 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- PART I Introduction
- PART II Forest flora of eastern Africa
- PART III Forest fauna of eastern Africa
- 6 Biogeography of East African montane forest millipedes
- 7 The Linyphiid spider fauna (Araneae: Linyphiidae) of mountain forests in the Eastern Arc mountains
- 8 The montane butterflies of the eastern Afrotropics
- 9 Herpetofauna of the eastern African forests
- 10 The zoogeography of the montane forest avifauna of eastern Tanzania
- 11 Mammals in the forests of eastern Africa
- 12 Ecology of the Zanzibar red colobus monkey, Colobus badius kirkii (Gray, 1968), in comparison with other red colobines
- 13 The socioecology of interspecific associations among the monkeys of the Mwanihana rain forest, Tanzania: a biogeographic perspective
- PART IV Conservation
- Index
Summary
Introduction
The spider fauna of East Africa is not particularly well known, but one group of spiders, the sheetweb weavers or dwarf spiders (family Linyphiidae), is much better known than any other group. This is quite strange since these spiders are small (most spiders are less than 3 mm in total length) and do not have any remarkable body colours. The family Linyphiidae is one of the largest spider families (second only to the jumping spiders, Salticidae) with some 3600 species described in 403 genera (Platnick, 1989).
The common English names for these spiders (dwarf or sheet-web spiders) are not very appropriate, since linyphiids are not smaller than spiders in several other families and sheet webs resembling those of linyphiids are also built by members of other spider families such as the Theridiidae, Cyatholipidae, Diguetidae, Pholcidae, Araneidae and Uloboridae (Eberhard, 1990). Furthermore, sheet webs are built only by some linyphiids, particularly representatives of the subfamily Linyphiinae.
An impressive amount of information on the East African linyphiid fauna has been published during the last 30 years, especially on the montane fauna. In East Africa, many mountains have now been explored at least once and this has revealed a relatively rich linyphiid fauna. However, ‘rich’ should be understood in an African context, as the diversity is low if one compares the number of species on each mountain in East Africa with the number of species on mountains in the northern hemisphere.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Biogeography and Ecology of the Rain Forests of Eastern Africa , pp. 115 - 132Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993
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