Gea (spider) explained
Gea is a genus of orb-weaver spiders first described by C. L. Koch in 1843.
Species
it contains thirteen species:[1]
- Gea africana Simon, 1895 – Congo
- Gea argiopides Strand, 1911 – New Guinea, Indonesia (Aru Is.)
- Gea bituberculata (Thorell, 1881) – New Guinea
- Gea eff Levi, 1983 – New Guinea, Papua New Guinea (New Britain)
- Gea heptagon (Hentz, 1850) – Pacific Is., Australia. Introduced to USA to Argentina
- Gea infuscata Tullgren, 1910 – East Africa, Angola
- Gea nilotica Simon, 1906 – Sudan
- Gea spinipes C. L. Koch, 1843 – India, China, Taiwan to Indonesia (Borneo)
- Gea s. nigrifrons Simon, 1901 – Malaysia
- Gea subarmata Thorell, 1890 – India, Bangladesh to Philippines, New Guinea
- Gea theridioides (L. Koch, 1872) – Australia (Queensland, New South Wales)
- Gea transversovittata Tullgren, 1910 – Congo, East Africa
- Gea zaragosa Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 – India, Philippines
Notes and References
- Web site: Gen. Gea C. L. Koch, 1843. World Spider Catalog. 2019-05-13. Natural History Museum Bern.