| Literature DB >> 25995738 |
Mustakiza Muslimin1, John-James Wilson2, Amir-Ridhwan M Ghazali1, Kamil A Braima1, John Jeffery1, Fitri Wan-Nor3, Mohamed E Alaa-Eldin4, Siti-Waheeda Mohd-Zin1, Wan S Wan-Yusoff1, Yusoff Norma-Rashid5, Yee L Lau1, Mahmud Rohela1, Noraishah M Abdul-Aziz1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The brown widow spider (Latrodectus geometricus Koch, 1841) has colonised many parts of the world from its continent of origin, Africa. By at least 1841, the species had successfully established populations in South America and has more recently expanded its range to the southern states of North America. This highly adaptable spider has been far more successful in finding its niche around the world than its famous cousins, the black widow, Latrodectus mactans, found in the south-eastern states of North America, and the red-back, Latrodectus hasselti, found mostly in Australia, New Zealand and Japan.Entities:
Keywords: Brown widow spider; Colonization; DNA barcoding; Envenomation; Global invasion; Invasive species; Latrodectus geometricus; Medically important arthropods; Synanthropy
Year: 2015 PMID: 25995738 PMCID: PMC4438562 DOI: 10.1186/s40409-015-0010-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Venom Anim Toxins Incl Trop Dis ISSN: 1678-9180
Figure 1Distribution of reported sightings of Latrodectus geometricus. (a) Map showing the global distribution of Latrodectus geometricus [1,2,7,11,12,19,21-24,27-127]. (b) Locations in the northwest, central and south of Peninsular Malaysia with new records of the brown widow spider.
Figure 2Common morphological characteristics of Latrodectus geometricus according to Koch (1841). (A) The hourglass-shaped streak on the underside of the abdomen (male, Johor, Malaysia). (B) Dome-shaped abdomen typical of a juvenile Theridiidae and the spiky spherical egg sacs (Penang, Malaysia). (C) Embolus inside the palp of the male spider showing four coils. (D) A brown widow caught in central Peninsular Malaysia bearing darker and more spherical features on its abdomen. (E) The epigynum, characteristic of females, with two pairs of spermathecae located on the underside of the abdomen. (F) Spiky spherical egg sacs lined in a row on a window sill of a house (Penang, Malaysia). (G) The dome-shaped abdomen of a female brown widow from the northwest of Peninsular Malaysia bearing lighter features on its abdomen. (H) Egg sacs, moulted skin and live and dead juvenile/adult L. geometricus (yellow arrows) being surrounded by its cobweb. (I) Dorsal aspect of abdomen with distinct pattern surrounded by cobweb, found in and around bicycle compartment.
Figure 3Neighbor-joining tree showing K2P distances between newly sequenced DNA barcodes from spiders collected in Peninsular Malaysia (codes: LACMA00XX) and publicly available sequence data for Latrodectus geometricus collected worldwide (GenBank accession numbers by locality).