Mughiphantes
Mughiphantes is a genus of dwarf spiders that was first described by Michael I. Saaristo & A. V. Tanasevitch in 1999.
Species
it contains sixty species:- M. aculifer – Russia
- M. afghanus – Afghanistan
- M. alticola – Nepal
- M. anachoretus – Nepal
- M. ancoriformis – Nepal
- M. arlaudi – France
- M. armatus – Central Europe
- M. baebleri – Alps
- M. beishanensis Tanasevitch, 2006 – China
- M. bicornis Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal
- M. brunneri – Italy
- M. carnicus – Italy
- M. cornutus – Europe, Turkey, Russia, Kazakhstan
- M. cuspidatus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal
- M. edentulus Tanasevitch, 2010 – United Arab Emirates
- M. falxus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal
- M. faustus – Nepal
- M. hadzii – Austria, Slovenia
- M. handschini – Central Europe
- M. hindukuschensis – Afghanistan
- M. ignavus – France
- M. inermus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal
- M. jaegeri Tanasevitch, 2006 – China
- M. johannislupi – France
- M. jugorum – France
- M. lithoclasicola – Bulgaria
- M. logunovi Tanasevitch, 2000 – Russia
- M. longiproper Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal
- M. martensi Tanasevitch, 2006 – China
- M. marusiki – Russia, Mongolia
- M. merretti – Italy
- M. mughi – Europe, Russia
- M. nigromaculatus – Russia, China
- M. numilionis – Nepal
- M. occultus – Nepal
- M. omega – Romania
- M. ovtchinnikovi – Kyrgyzstan
- M. pulcher – Central Europe
- M. pulcheroides – Italy
- M. pyrenaeus – France
- M. restrictus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal
- M. rotundatus – Nepal
- M. rupium – Germany, Austria
- M. setifer – Nepal
- M. setosus Tanasevitch & Saaristo, 2006 – Nepal
- M. severus – Austria
- M. sherpa – Nepal
- M. sobrioides Tanasevitch, 2000 – Russia
- M. sobrius – Norway, Russia
- M. styriacus – Austria
- M. suffusus – Scandinavia, Russia
- M. taczanowskii – Russia, Mongolia
- M. tienschangensis – Central Asia
- M. triglavensis – Austria, Slovenia
- M. variabilis – Central Europe
- M. varians – Eastern Europe
- M. vittatus – Central Asia
- M. whymperi – Ireland, Britain, Scandinavia, Russia
- M. yadongensis – China
- M. yeti – Nepal