Gea (spider)
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Gea (spider)
''Gea'' is a genus of Araneidae, orb-weaver spiders first described by Carl Ludwig Koch, C. L. Koch in 1843. Species it contains thirteen species: *''Gea africana'' Eugène Simon, Simon, 1895 – Congo *''Gea argiopides'' Embrik Strand, Strand, 1911 – New Guinea, Indonesia (Aru Is.) *''Gea bituberculata'' (Tamerlan Thorell, Thorell, 1881) – New Guinea *''Gea eff'' Herbert Walter Levi, Levi, 1983 – New Guinea, Papua New Guinea (New Britain) *''Gea heptagon'' (Nicholas Marcellus Hentz, Hentz, 1850) – Pacific Is., Australia. Introduced to USA to Argentina *''Gea infuscata'' Albert Tullgren, Tullgren, 1910 – East Africa, Angola *''Gea nilotica'' Simon, 1906 – Sudan *''Gea spinipes'' C. L. Koch, 1843 – India, China, Taiwan to Indonesia (Borneo) **''Gea spinipes, Gea s. nigrifrons'' Simon, 1901 – Malaysia *''Gea subarmata'' Thorell, 1890 – India, Bangladesh to Philippines, New Guinea *''Gea theridioides'' (Ludwig Carl Christian Koch, L. Koch, 1872) – Australia (Quee ...
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Herbert Walter Levi
Herbert Walter Levi (January 3, 1921 – November 3, 2014) was professor emeritus of zoology and curator of arachnology at the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University. He was born in Germany, educated there and at Leighton Park School, Reading in England. He then received his higher education at the University of Connecticut and the University of Wisconsin. Levi authored about 150 scientific papers on spiders and on biological conservation. He is the author of the popular Golden Guide ''Spiders and their Kin'', with Lorna Rose Levi (his wife) and Herbert Spencer Zim. Levi received the 2007 Eugene Simon Award from the International Society of Arachnology "for his immense influence on US spider research". He was an elected honorary member of the American Arachnological Society. Levi was an editorial board member for the ''Journal of Arachnology''. The pseudoscorpion genus ''Levichelifer'', the spider species ''Anisaedus levii'' and the whip spider species ''Phrynus levii''D ...
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Ludwig Carl Christian Koch
Ludwig Carl Christian Koch (8 November 1825 – 1 November 1908) was a German entomologist and arachnologist. He was born in Regensburg, Germany, and died in Nuremberg, Germany. He studied in Nuremberg, initially law, but then turned to medicine and science. From 1850, he practiced as a physician in the Wöhrd district of Nuremberg. He is considered among the four most influential scientists on insects and spiders in the second half of the 19th century. He wrote numerous works on the arachinoids of Europe, Siberia, and Australia. His work earned him worldwide reputation as "Spider Koch". Sometimes confused with his father Carl Ludwig Koch (1778–1857), another famous arachnologist, his name is abbreviated L.Koch on species descriptions; his father's name is abbreviated C.L.Koch Pierre Bonnet. ''Bibliographia araneorum,'' (1945) Les frères Doularoude (Toulouse). Works ''Die Arachniden Australiens'' (1871-1883), his major work on Australian spiders, was completed by Eugen ...
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Albert Tullgren
Hugo Albert Tullgren (7 September 1874, in Stockholm – 1 July 1958) was a Swedish entomologist and arachnologist. In 1899 he received his bachelor's degree from Uppsala University, then from 1902 worked as an assistant at the National Entomological Institute. From 1907 he was associated with the entomology department of the ''Centralanstalten för försöksväsendet på jordbruksområdet'' (Central Institute for Experimental Agriculture), of which, he became a professor in 1913. The jumping spider genus '' Tullgrenella'' was named in his honor by Cândido Firmino de Mello-Leitão. The eponymous "Tullgren funnel" is a modified Berlese funnel, a device used to extract small insects and arthropods from soil samples. Selected works * "On the spiders collected in Florida by Dr. Einar Lönnberg, 1892-93" (in English, 1901). * "Spiders collected in the Aysen Valley in South-Chile by P. Dusén" (in English, 1902). * "On some species of the genus Scolia (s.1.) from the East-Ind ...
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Nicholas Marcellus Hentz
Nicholas Marcellus Hentz (July 25, 1797 – November 4, 1856) was a French American educator and arachnologist. Biography Hentz was born in Versailles, France. He was the youngest child of Charles Nicholas Arnould Hentz and Marie-Anne Therese Daubree Hentz. He studied medicine and learned the art of miniature painting in Paris. His father was an active Republican and participant in the French Revolution. Upon the restoration of the Bourbons in 1815, his father was banished from France. So, in 1816, Marcellus immigrated with his family to the United States, where they settled in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania. He taught French and miniature painting in Boston, Philadelphia, and other places. He became a member of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia (ANSP) in 1819. His illustrations were published in their journal. Among these illustrations are three well known watercolors, two of which are of freshwater fish from Alabama (painted in 1847) and one is a miniature of Hentz's ...
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Gea Heptagon
''Gea heptagon'' is a species of orb weaver Orb-weaver spiders are members of the spider family Araneidae. They are the most common group of builders of spiral wheel-shaped webs often found in gardens, fields, and forests. The English word "orb" can mean "circular", hence the English name ... spiders in the family Araneidae. It is found in Pacific Islands, Australia, and a range from has been introduced into United States and Argentina. References External links * Araneidae Articles created by Qbugbot Spiders described in 1850 {{araneidae-stub, Common name=Heptagonal Orbweaver ...
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