Identification, Images, & Information
For Insects, Spiders & Their Kin
For the United States & Canada

Subgenus Ephippiochthonius


Two European Arachnids New to the United States
By William B. Muchmore
Entomological News 74: 208-210, 1963
Full Text

First record of the European opilionid, Trogulus tricarinatus, in the USA. Also, a record of the European pseudoscorpion, Roncus lubricus, having been introduced to a greenhouse, but the population disappeared (apparently eradicated by the continued application of pesticides).

A List of the Spiders of the Grand Teton Park Area, with Descriptions of Some New North American Spiders
By Lowrie, Donald C. & Willis J. Gertsch
American Museum Novitates, 1736:1-29, 1955
Lowrie, Donald C. & Willis J. Gertsch. 1955. A List of the Spiders of the Grand Teton Park Area, with Descriptions of Some New North American Spiders. American Museum Novitates, 1736:1-29.

http://digitallibrary.amnh.org/dspace/handle/2246/4713

Spiders of the Eastern US, A Photographic Guide
By W. Mike Howell and Ronald L. Jenkins
pearson education, 2004
Information about the book you could find at:

http://www.samford.edu/schools/artsci/biology/spiderbk.htm

Spiders and Their Kin: A Golden Guide from St. Martin's Press
By Herbert W. Levi, Lorna R. Levi, Nicholas Strekalovsky
St. Martin's Press, 2001

A Field Guide to Spiders and Scorpions of Texas
By John A. Jackman
Gulf Publishing, 2002

Genitalic morphology and phylogenomic placement of the Australian spider Paraplectanoides crassipes Keyserling, 1886 (Araneae, A
By Hormiga, G., Kulkarni, S., Arnedo, M. A., Dimitrov, D., Giribet, G., Kallal, R. J. & Scharff, N.
Invertebrate Systematics 37(12): 797-818, 2023
Genitalic morphology and phylogenomic placement of the Australian spider Paraplectanoides crassipes Keyserling, 1886 (Araneae, Araneidae) with a discussion on the classification of the family Araneidae.

https://wsc.nmbe.ch/reference/17491
http://dx.doi.org/10.1071/IS23050

North American vegetable pests: The pattern of invasion
By Capinera J.L.
Am. Entomol. 48(1): 20‒39, 2002

Insects and Their Beneficial Microbes
By Angela E. Douglas
Princeton University Press, 2022
A comprehensive overview of symbiotic relationships between insects and microbes. Insects and Their Beneficial Microbes provides a much-needed conceptual framework for the growing discipline of insect-microbial interactions, and offers a wealth of insights into insect symbioses from molecular, physiological, ecological, and evolutionary perspectives.