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Cheiracanthium inclusum, alternately known as the black-footed yellow sac spider or the American yellow sac spider (in order to distinguish it from its European cousin C. punctorium), was formerly classified as a true sac spider (of the family Clubionidae), and then placed in the family Miturgidae, but now belongs to family Cheiracanthiidae. [1]
Cheiracanthium, commonly called yellow sac spiders, is a genus of araneomorph spiders in the family Cheiracanthiidae, and was first described by Carl Ludwig Koch in 1839. [4] They are usually pale in colour, and have an abdomen that can range from yellow to beige.
Cheiracanthium inclusum, also known as the black-footed yellow sac spider, has been implicated in necrotic skin lesions. C. inclusum's venom has been claimed to be weakly necrotic, but arachnologists contest this assertion. [21] This spider can be found all over North, Central, and South America, as well as in The West Indies.
Yellow sac spider. What they look like: The spider will build a tent-like structure out of silk. “They hide in the sac during the day and then hunt at night,” Potzler says. They’re usually a ...
Yellow Sac Spider. Yellow sac spiders are also more common in eastern Washington, but can still be found in the Seattle are. Yellow sac spiders can be yellow, white or green with darker legs and ...
The name house spider is a generic term for 11 different spiders commonly found around human dwellings, and may refer to their common name: Yellow sac spider, Cheiracanthium inclusum, a common spider worldwide often found in dwellings; Black house spider, Badumna insignis, an Australian spider also found in New Zealand
Yellow sac spiders are often found in the Seattle area and eastern Washington. They can be yellow, white or greenish and their bodies are only about a quarter- to a half-inch long. These spiders ...
Cheiracanthiidae is a family of araneomorph spiders first described by Vladimir Wagner in 1887. [1] The synonym Eutichuridae was used for a long time, but Cheiracanthiidae has priority. [1]