Sheet-weaver
Guides
Agyneta barrowsi
Agyneta barrowsi is a species of sheet weaver spider in the family Linyphiidae, described by Chamberlin & Ivie in 1944. It occurs in the United States and Canada. The genus Agyneta belongs to the large family of dwarf sheet weavers, which are characterized by their small size and flat, sheet-like webs.
Agyneta bronx
Agyneta bronx is a species of sheet weaver spider (family Linyphiidae) described by Nadine Dupérré in 2013 from specimens collected across multiple U.S. states. The species epithet references The Bronx, New York, where the type specimen was collected in 1964. It belongs to a large genus of small-bodied spiders commonly known as money spiders.
Agyneta olivacea
Agyneta olivacea is a species of sheet-web spider (family Linyphiidae) described by James Henry Emerton in 1882. It has a Holarctic distribution, occurring across northern regions of North America and Eurasia. The species was originally described under the basionym Microneta olivacea. As a member of the sheet weaver family, it constructs flat, horizontal webs rather than aerial orb webs.
Agyneta semipallida
Agyneta semipallida is a species of sheet weaver spider in the family Linyphiidae. It was described from the United States in 1944. The species is known from limited records and has not been documented on iNaturalist. It was originally described as Meioneta semipallida before being transferred to Agyneta.
Agyneta serrata
Agyneta serrata is a sheet weaver spider described by Emerton in 1909. It belongs to the family Linyphiidae, one of the largest families of spiders commonly known as money spiders or sheet web weavers. The species has been documented in Canada and the United States.
Diplocephalus
Diplocephalus is a genus of dwarf spiders in the family Linyphiidae, subfamily Erigoninae, first described by Philipp Bertkau in 1883. The genus contains 49 species and one subspecies with a wide geographic distribution. Males of at least some species possess specialized glandular head structures that produce secretions transferred to females during courtship to trigger copulation. The genus is part of the diverse sheet-weaving spider fauna.
Pocadicnemis
Pocadicnemis is a genus of sheet-weaving spiders (family Linyphiidae) established by Eugène Louis Simon in 1884. The genus contains seven described species distributed across Asia, Europe, and North America. As linyphiids, members construct flat, horizontal sheet webs to capture prey.
Spirembolus
Spirembolus is a genus of sheet web spiders in the family Linyphiidae, first described by Ralph Vary Chamberlin in 1920. The genus contains 41 species distributed across North America, with records from the United States, Canada, and Mexico. These spiders are small-bodied web-builders characteristic of the sheet weaver guild. The genus has been subject to taxonomic revision, with many species described by A.F. Millidge in 1980.