Leptoctenus byrrhus
Leptoctenus byrrhus is a member of the Wandering Spider family, the Ctenidae.
Description
Leptoctenus byrrhus is a medium-sized, hairy spider with a gray background color and body and legs heavily splotched with dark marks. Atop the cephalothorax and abdomen, the splotches form two irregular, heavy lines running longitudinally; on the legs they appear as dark rings, at least when viewed from above.These features resemble those of numerous species in the Wandering Spider Family, as can be seen on the iNaturalist page comparing species of the family. Technical features of Leptoctenus byrrhus, often hard to see without magnification, include the following:
- Body lengths of males are up to about 10.5mm.
- The part of the cephalothorax from which the legs arise, behind the head part, is higher than the head part.
- Each of the spider's two jaws, or chelicerae, bear a fang-like part, the "cheliceral fang," on the back part of which there are only three teeth.
- At leg ends, small, dense tufts of hair known as "scopula pads" are moderately developed.
- The pedipalps, are segmented similarly to the legs, and as such, on males, the tibia sections, the "male palpal tibia," bear long outgrowths, the "apophyses," on which grow long, curved extensions that bend sharply back toward a hollow structure, the "palpal cymbium," surrounding and protecting the palpal bulb at mid-length.
- The male's palpal tibia are excavated distally from the base of the apophysis.
- The females' external genital structure known as the epigynum is distinct, wider than long, and has a long, narrow neck, with spurs on the side.
Behavior
Leptoctenus byrrhus walks with its front pair oflegs held forward as if they were "antennae." Even when at rest, often these legs are held off the ground.
Habitat
Leptoctenus byrrhus has been reported amid detritus, under rocks, at the entrance of a cave, and in a woodrat nest. Images on this page are of a spider found beneath a sheet of plywood lying on the ground.In the northeastern Mexican city of Ciudad Victoria in the state of Tamaulipas, Leptoctenus byrrhus has been encountered inside people's houses.