Langelurillus kenyaensis is a species of jumping spider in the genus Langelurillus that is endemic in Kenya. It was first described in 2016 by Angelika Dawidowicz and Wanda Wesołowska, and is named after the country where it was first identified. The spider is small, with a black oval carapace that is typically 2.8mm long and a blackish-grey spherical abdomen 2.2mm long. The short legs are orangish-brown have large dark markings, brown hairs and brown spines. Only the female has been described. It has a small epigyne and longer seminal ducts that are looped, which distinguishes it from the otherwise similar Langelurillus primus.
Langelurillus kenyaensis is a jumping spider that was first described by Angelika Dawidowicz and Wanda Wesołowska in 2016.[1] It was one of over 500 species identified by the Polish arachnologist Wesołowska during her career, which was more than almost any other scientist in the discipline. It was allocated it to the genus Langelurillus, which had been raised by Maciej Próchniewicz in 1994. The genus is related to Aelurillus and Langona but the spiders are smaller and, unlike these genera and Phlegra, they lack the parallel stripes on the back of the body that is feature of the majority of these spiders. In 2015, Wayne Maddison listed the genus in the subtribe Aelurillina, which also contains Aelurillus, Langona and Phlegra, in the tribe Aelurillini, within the subclade Saltafresia in the clade Salticoida. In 2016, Jerzy Prószyński placed the same genera in a group named Aelurillines based on the shape of the spiders' copulatory organs.
Langelurillus kenyaensis is a small spider. The male has a cephalothorax that is typically 2.8mm long and 1.9mm wide. The carapace is a black high oval and covered with greyish-white hairs. The eye field is also black. The clypeus has long translusclent hairs. The chelicerae are light brown with one very small tooth visible to the front. The labium is brownish with pale tips. The abdomen is typically 2.2mm long and 2.5mm wide and rounder than the carapace, nearly spherical. It is blackish-grey and covered with dense grey hairs. The underside is light. The spinnerets are long and yellow with dark ends and the short legs are orangish-brown with large dark markings, brown hairs and brown spines. The epigyne is very small. The seminal ducts, which are longer and more convoluted than those on the similar Langelurillus primus, form a loop and lead to bean-shaped and very sclerotised spermathecae.
Almost all, if not all, Langelurillus spiders live in sub-Saharan Africa. Langelurillus kenyaensis was first identified in Kenya, after which it is named. The holotype was discovered in 1965 on Mount Elgon. It has only been found in that area of the country.