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Telemidae, also known as long-legged cave spiders, is a family of small haplogyne spiders. Most are cave dwelling spiders with six eyes, though some do not have any eyes at all. Most are cave dwelling spiders with six eyes, though some do not have any eyes at all.
Caves of Qud was released on Steam in 2015, under their early access model. [10] Content was gradually added through weekly updates. In July 2023, Kitfox Games , the publisher of the Steam version of Dwarf Fortress , announced that they would be publishing the 1.0 version of Caves of Qud the following year. [ 11 ]
Leptonetidae is a family of small spiders adapted to live in dark and moist places such as caves. [1] The family is relatively primitive having diverged around the Middle Jurassic period. [ 2 ] They were first described by Eugène Simon in 1890.
That work led them to the conclusion that this was a native fungus specific to indigenous cave-dwelling spider species. The fungus favours man-made habitats like culverts, tunnels and cellars.
In the caves, researchers collected juvenile and adult spiders, some bearing egg sacs, the study said. The specimens turned out to be a new species of cellar spider known as Priscula pastaza.
Sinopoda scurion is a species of huntsman spider discovered in 2012 in a Laotian cave. It has a leg span of about 6 centimetres (2.4 in) and a body span of about 12 millimetres (0.47 in). It is the first recorded huntsman spider to lack eyes. [1] Due to its dark cave habitat, it has no requirement of vision for hunting. [2]
Cicurina baronia is a rare species of spider in the family Cicurinidae known by the common name Robber Baron cave meshweaver. The species is endemic to the San Antonio, Texas area of the United States. It is one of nine species deemed the Bexar County Invertebrates, as all nine are found in similar cave environments in the central region of ...
Cicurina, also called the cave meshweaver, [4] is a genus in the spider family Cicurinidae. [5] It was first described by Anton Menge in 1871. [6] The name is from the Latin root "cucur-", meaning "to tame". [4] Originally placed with the funnel weavers, it was moved to the Dictynidae in 1967, [3] then to the Hahniidae in 2017. [7]