Langona improcera is a species of jumping spider in the genus Langona that lives in Tanzania. The male was first described by Wanda Wesołowska and Anthony Russell-Smith in 2000. The female has not been identified. The spider is large with a carapace between 2.2and long and an abdomen that is between 2.1and in length. There are traces of stripes on the reddish-brown carapace. The abdomen has a distinctive scutum that distinguishes it from related species. The palpal bulb is also unusually narrow and has a long lobe at the base which can also be used to tell the spider apart from others in the genus.
Langona improcera is a jumping spider that was first described by Wanda Wesołowska and Anthony Russell-Smith in 2000.[1] The species was placed in the genus Langona, first described by Eugène Simon in 1901. The species is one of over 500 described by Wesołowska during her career. The genus was listed in the subtribe Aelurillina in the tribe Aelurillini by Wayne Maddison in 2015. These were allocated to the clade Saltafresia. In 2017, the genus was grouped with nine other genera of jumping spiders under the name Aelurillines. It is particularly closely related to the genus Aelurillus, after which the subtribe, tribe and group are named. The species name is related to the Latin word for modest.
The spider is large and hairy. The male has a pear-shaped carapace that is between 2.2and in length and 2and in width. It is reddish-brown with a black eye field and has traces of stripes along its back. The abdomen is yellow and between 2.1and long and between 1.8and wide. It has a distinctive scutum on its back. The chelicerae is toothless apart from two small teeth on the edge of front. The spinnerets are long and biege. The legs are yellow and have brown hairs and spines. The pedipalps are orange with hairy cymbium. The palpal bulb is comparatively narrow with a long lobe at the base and a bump in the femur. There is a single appendage, or apophysis, on the tibia of the pedipalps. The female has not been described.[1]
The spider can be distinguished from other members of the genus by the scutum on its abdomen. It differs from Langona warchalowskii in the narrowness of the palpal bulb and the size of the lobe at its base.
Langona improcera is endemic to Tanzania.[1] The holotype was discovered in the 1997 in the Mkomazi National Park, living in shrub dominated by Senegalia mellifera.