Apochinomma

Apochinomma
Female A. elongatum
A. formicaeforme
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Corinnidae
Genus: Apochinomma
Pavesi, 1881[1]
Type species
A. formicaeforme
Pavesi, 1881
Species

16, see text

Apochinomma is a genus of corinnid sac spiders first described by Pietro Pavesi in 1881.[2]

Distribution

Spiders in this genus are found in Africa, Asia and Brazil.[1]

Name

The genus name is grammatically neutral, as it is coined after Corinnomma, which itself is a combination of Corinna and Ancient Greek ὄμμα (omma, "eye"), which is neutral in Greek.[3]

Species

As of September 2025 it contains eleven species:[1]

  • Apochinomma armatum Mello-Leitão, 1922 – Brazil
  • Apochinomma constrictum Simon, 1896 – Brazil
  • Apochinomma deceptum Haddad, 2013 – Mozambique, South Africa
  • Apochinomma dolosum Simon, 1897 – India
  • Apochinomma elongatum Haddad, 2013 – Tanzania, Malawi, Botswana
  • Apochinomma formicaeforme Pavesi, 1881 (type) – West, Central, East, Southern Africa
  • Apochinomma malkini Haddad, 2013 – Nigeria
  • Apochinomma medog Zhang & Zhang, 2023 – China
  • Apochinomma nitidum (Thorell, 1895) – India, Myanmar, Thailand, Indonesia (Borneo, Sulawesi)
  • Apochinomma parvum Haddad, 2013 – Guinea
  • Apochinomma pyriforme (Keyserling, 1891) – Brazil

Several species were transferred to other genera, such as Mazax, Myrmecotypus and Castianeira.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c d Gloor, Daniel; Nentwig, Wolfgang; Blick, Theo; Kropf, Christian. "Gen. Apochinomma Pavesi, 1881". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2025-09-22.
  2. ^ Pavesi, P. (1881). "Studi sugli Aracnidi africani. II. Aracnidi d'Inhambane raccolti da Carlo Fornasini e considerazioni sull'aracnofauna del Mozambico". Annali del Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova. 16: 536–560.
  3. ^ Karsch, F. (1880). "Arachnologische Blätter (Decas I)". Zeitschrift für die Gesammten Naturwissenschaften. Dritte Folge. 5: 373–409.