Recent from talks
Nothing was collected or created yet.
Deinopidae
View on Wikipedia
| Net-casting spiders Temporal range:
| |
|---|---|
| Deinopis subrufa front view | |
| Deinopis sp. with web | |
| Scientific classification | |
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Arthropoda |
| Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
| Class: | Arachnida |
| Order: | Araneae |
| Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
| Family: | Deinopidae C. L. Koch, 1850 |
| Genera | |
| Diversity | |
| 3 genera, 67 species | |
| blue: reported countries (WSC) green: observation hotspots (iNaturalist) | |
Deinopidae, also known as net-casting spiders, are a family of circumtropical cribellate[1] spiders first described by Carl Ludwig Koch in 1850.[2] They are of stick-like elongated spiders that catch prey by stretching a web across their front legs before propelling themselves forward. These unusual webs will stretch two or three times their relaxed size, entangling any prey that touch them.
The posterior median eyes have excellent night vision, allowing them to cast nets accurately in low-light conditions. These eyes are larger than the others, and sometimes makes these spiders appear to only have two eyes. Ogre-faced spiders (Deinopis) are the best known genus in this family. The name refers to the perceived physical similarity to the mythological creature of the same name. This family also includes the humped-back spiders (Menneus).[3]
Distribution
[edit]They are distributed through tropics worldwide from Australia to Africa and the Americas.[3]
In Florida, Deinopis often hangs upside down from a silk line under palmetto fronds during the day. At night, it emerges to practice its unusual prey capture method on invertebrate prey. Its eyes are able to gather available light more efficiently than the eyes of cats and owls, and are able to do this despite the lack of a reflective layer (tapetum lucidum); instead, each night, a large area of light-sensitive membrane is manufactured within the eyes, and since arachnid eyes do not have irises, it is rapidly destroyed again at dawn.[4][5]
Genera
[edit]As of September 2025[update], the World Spider Catalog accepts the following genera:[3]
Two genera formerly included in this family, Avella O. P-Cambridge, 1877 and Avellopsis Purcell, 1904, are now placed in Menneus.
-
D. longipes casting a net
-
Egg sac
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Coddington, J.A.; Levi, H.W. (1991). "Systematics and Evolution of Spiders (Araneae)". Annu. Rev. Ecol. Syst. 22 (1): 565–592. Bibcode:1991AnRES..22..565C. doi:10.1146/annurev.es.22.110191.003025.
- ^ Koch, C. L. (1850). Übersicht des Arachnidensystems. doi:10.5962/bhl.title.39561.
- ^ a b c "Family Deinopidae". World Spider Catalog. Retrieved 25 September 2025.
- ^ "How spiders see the world". Australian Museum. 2018-11-16. Retrieved 2019-01-21.
- ^ Blest, A. D. (1978). "The rapid synthesis and destruction of photoreceptor membrane by a dinopid spider: a daily cycle". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 200 (1141): 463–483. Bibcode:1978RSPSB.200..463B. doi:10.1098/rspb.1978.0027. S2CID 85388527.
External links
[edit]Deinopidae
View on GrokipediaDescription
General Morphology
Deinopidae spiders are characterized by their elongated and slender body structure, which sets them apart from the more robust forms typical of many orb-weaving spiders. The cephalothorax is elongate and often pear- or diamond-shaped, featuring a narrow cephalic region, while the abdomen is cylindrical, longer than wide, and may include paired or unpaired dorsal tubercles depending on the genus.[8] The chelicerae bear anterior and posterior teeth, the number of which varies across species, aiding in prey subjugation.[8] Adults typically measure 7–28 mm in total body length, with females ranging from 7.2–28 mm and males from 5–23 mm, exhibiting minimal sexual dimorphism except for females being slightly larger overall.[8] Leg spans can extend up to approximately 70 mm, contributing to their stick-like appearance.[9] Coloration is predominantly cryptic, featuring shades of gray, brown, tan, and occasional silvery white or olive green tones, often with irregular patterns and patches of white or black that mimic twigs or bark for camouflage; bright warning colors are absent.[6][10] The legs are notably long and thin, with the leg formula 1-2-4-3, and legs I and II particularly elongated to facilitate net-holding. These front legs feature specific spination, including stout setae and, in males, modifications such as apophyses, aiding in the manipulation of their small cribellate webs.[8] The fourth metatarsus bears a calamistrum, and the fourth tarsus includes a ventral comb of setae with a reduced retrolateral claw, adaptations tied to their unique silk-handling behavior.[8]Sensory Adaptations
Deinopids, particularly in genera Deinopis and Asianopis, are commonly known as ogre-faced spiders due to their eye morphology, while all deinopids are net-casting spiders; they feature eight eyes in the standard arachnid arrangement: two pairs of anterior eyes (median and lateral) and two pairs of posterior eyes (median and lateral). In Deinopis and Asianopis, the posterior median eyes (PMEs) are exceptionally enlarged, often reaching diameters of up to 1.4 mm in species like Deinopis subrufa, and project forward when the spider tilts its cephalothorax, creating the characteristic "ogre-faced" appearance. In contrast, Menneus has proportionally smaller PMEs. The anterior median eyes (AMEs) are smaller, typically around 0.3 mm in diameter, while the anterior and posterior lateral eyes are even more reduced in size. These disproportionate eye sizes reflect a specialization for nocturnal vision, with the PMEs comprising up to 70% of the cephalothorax volume in some Deinopis individuals, as measured through comparative anatomical studies.[11][1][12][4] The principal eyes, particularly the PMEs, possess a canoe-shaped tapetum—a reflective layer behind the retina—that dramatically boosts light capture in dim conditions, rendering these eyes approximately 2000 times more sensitive to light than human photoreceptors. This adaptation enables high visual acuity for motion detection, allowing Deinopis and Asianopis to identify and track small, moving prey over distances of up to 50 cm or more in extremely low-light conditions, as demonstrated in field and laboratory experiments where eye occlusion drastically reduced capture success. Eye diameter ratios, such as PME-to-AME exceeding 2:1 in Deinopis species, further underscore this visual specialization, prioritizing resolution for low-contrast targets over fine detail. While Deinopis and Asianopis exhibit these extreme visual specializations, Menneus has less enlarged PMEs adapted differently for nocturnal hunting.[4][13] While vision dominates sensory processing in Deinopidae, other modalities play supportive roles. These spiders exhibit reduced dependence on tactile cues compared to diurnal species, owing to their visual prowess, but retain trichobothria—fine sensory hairs on the legs—for detecting substrate vibrations and airborne acoustic signals, such as those from flying insects up to 2 meters away at intensities above 60 dB SPL. This mechanoreceptive system serves as a secondary alert mechanism, integrating with visual input during prey localization but remaining subordinate to the eyes' primary function in nocturnal foraging.[7][4]Taxonomy
Phylogenetic Classification
Deinopidae is classified within the order Araneae, suborder Araneomorphae, and superfamily Deinopoidea.[14] In contemporary phylogenies, the family is positioned as sister to the retrolateral tibial apophysis (RTA) clade, which encompasses groups such as Marpissina and Entelegynae, based on extensive phylogenomic analyses.[14] Earlier morphological studies alternatively placed Deinopoidea (including Deinopidae and Uloboridae) as sister to Araneoidea within the cribellate orb-weaving lineage Orbiculariae. Historically, Deinopidae was associated with cursorial hunting spiders such as those in Lycosidae and Salticidae due to superficial similarities in ambulatory behavior, but this classification was revised through systematic analyses recognizing its distinct cribellate traits. A pivotal 2012 study provided the first comprehensive phylogeny of the family, employing 53 morphological characters (including somatic and genital structures) and 3 behavioral characters scored across 17 deinopid species and two outgroups, resulting in a single most parsimonious tree that confirmed the family's monophyly. Molecular evidence from cladistic analyses supports the monophyly of Deinopidae, with recent phylogenomic datasets using thousands of genes further validating this placement and resolving interfamilial relationships within Araneomorphae.[14] Key synapomorphies defining the family include reduced chelicerae, a unique configuration of enlarged posterior median eyes, and the specialized net-casting behavior, which distinguish Deinopidae from related araneomorph lineages.Genera and Species Diversity
The Deinopidae family currently includes three recognized genera: Deinopis MacLeay, 1839; Menneus Simon, 1876; and Asianopis Lin & Li, 2020, encompassing a total of 71 valid species as documented in the World Spider Catalog as of November 2025.[15] This diversity reflects ongoing taxonomic refinements, with the family exhibiting a circumtropical distribution but concentrated in tropical regions. The genera differ in their geographic scopes, with Deinopis primarily confined to the Americas, Menneus to the Old World tropics of Africa and Australia, and Asianopis spanning East and Southeast Asia along with extensions into Africa, Australia, and Madagascar.[4]| Genus | Number of Species | Primary Distribution |
|---|---|---|
| Deinopis | 20 | Americas (Neotropical and Nearctic) |
| Menneus | 14 | Africa and Australia (Old World) |
| Asianopis | 37 | East/Southeast Asia, Africa, Australia |