Kimberley burrow-living wolf spider | |
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Male | |
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Male | |
Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Lycosidae |
Genus: | Hogna |
Species: | H. adjacens |
Binomial name | |
Hogna adjacens Roewer, 1959 |
Hogna adjacens is a species of spider in the family Lycosidae. [1] It is endemic to South Africa and is commonly known as the Kimberley burrow-living wolf spider. [2]
Hogna adjacens is found in the Northern Cape and Limpopo provinces of South Africa. [2] Notable localities include Kimberley, Vyeboom, and Lekgalameetse Nature Reserve. [2]
This species is a free-living ground dweller that lives in open burrows. [2]
It has been sampled from the Savanna biome at altitudes ranging from 591 to 1218 m. [2]
Hogna adjacens is described only from females. [2]
The cephalothorax is brown without protruding stripes or rays and lacks side bands. It has a very narrow, tightly parallel-edged, rusty yellow median band between the eyes of the black eye field at its narrowest point. The surface of the cephalothorax is uniformly grey-white hairy in the remainder. [3]
The abdomen is dorsally grey-brown with fine and dense yellowish speckles, bearing a slightly blackish median lancet band in front that is bordered on both sides by a pair of blackish spots at its middle and rear end. The sternum is uniformly black, with brown coxae each bearing a lighter basal spot. Other leg segments are uniformly rust-brown and not spotted. The chelicerae are black and grey hairy frontally. [3]
The species is protected in Lekgalameetse Nature Reserve. Additional sampling is needed to collect males and determine the full geographic range. [2]
The species was described by Roewer in 1959, with the holotype locality given as Kalahari. The paratype was collected in Kimberley, with both collections made prior to 1959. [2]