Subspecies
No subspecies are recognized.
Original description
Synonyms
Aranea
picea Sulzer, 1776
Atypus piceus
(Sulzer, 1776)
Oletera piceus
(Sulzer, 1776)
Oletera picea (Sulzer, 1776)
Aranea
subterranea Roemer, 1789
Atypus subterraneus
(Roemer, 1789)
Aranea aquatica
Roemer, 1789
Atypus sulzeri Latreille, 1806
Atypus beckii O. P.-Cambridge, 1875
Proatypus thaleri Braun, 1963
Note: Atypus piceus and Atypus
affinis have long been regarded as
identical. Older literature therefore does not
distinguish between these two species and often
list all names given to the two species as
synonyms.
Identification
Body length (without cheliceres) 10 - 15 mm in the
female; males are smaller ranging between 7 - 10
mm. The females are dark brown with a purple hue,
the males are darker, almost black, also with a
purple hue.
Distribution
Recorded from Central and south-eastern Europe,
and eastward to Iran. The species is distributed
in western and southern Germany and prefers higher
altitudes between 400 m and 1200 m. It is rare and
is listed on the Red List of endangered species.
Biology
Like all
German species of Atypus the animals spend most
of their lives inside their subterranean tubes
that also serves as a trap to catch food (please
see the General
Introduction for more details). A single
female can have between 70 to 160 offspring per
year. The spiderlings hatch during fall and
remain with their mother over winter. In spring
the spiderlings leave the tube of the mother and
climb a nearby plant where they start to produce
long silk threads for ballooning (=dispersal by
air currents). After wind-mediated dispersal the
spiderlings build their own tubes and live in
them until they reach maturity in their fourth
year. Adult males then leave their tubes in June
or July to search for females, but the females
only leave their tubes to grab prey or to get
rid of soil particles and dirt that accumulate
in the tube over time. Males enter the tube of a
female and mating takes place within the tube.
The males die after mating and thus rarely reach
a total age of four years, whereas females can
live for up to 10 years.
The species mostly lives in "colonies" of
several hundred individuals that have built
their tubes next to each other. They prefer
calcareous soil and dry, sunny habitats. Dry
grassland and forest edges are preferred
especially if the terrain contains a slope,
which makes it easier for the animals to build
their tubes and camouflage the entrance; it also
creates a favourable microclimate because the
slope increases sunshine intensity and duration.
This page has been updated on May 6, 2012
This site is online since May 31, 2005
Copyright © by Nikola-Michael Prpic. All
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