The family Filistatidae was created in 1867 by
Anton Ausserer. It was based on the species he called
Filistata bicolor (now
Filistata insidiatrix), a Mediterranean species also found in southern Austria.
Phylogeny On the basis of the features of the male and female genitalia, the family was placed in the
Haplogynae, usually as the sister taxon of the remaining members of the group. However, unlike the other haplogynes, Filistatidae are
cribellate and do not show a decrease in the number of segments of the anterior lateral spinnerets. They have other features which have been regarded as "primitive": an M-shaped intestine, only leg IV moving while combing silk, and posterior book lung leaves being present in early juveniles. A 2013 study based on molecular evidence placed the family as sister to a clade consisting of
Hypochilidae and the remaining haplogynes. The precise phylogenetic position of the family was described in 2014 as "one of the most enigmatic problems in spider phylogeny". A 2015 study, based on
genomic data, places Filistatidae with Hypochilidae in a clade outside most of the families previously placed in Haplogynae: }} This placement suggests that features that were thought to be "primitive" to araneomorph spiders as a whole (such as an M-shaped midgut) could actually be novel derived features (
synapomorphies) of the Hypochilidae-Filistatidae clade.
Genera Filistata insidiatrix - Ludivine Lamare - 516514705.jpeg|
Filistata insidiatrix Pikelinia mahuell - Hernan Augusto Iuri - 107772646.jpeg|male
Pikelinia mahuell , this family includes eighteen genera and 192 species: •
Afrofilistata Benoit, 1968 –
West,
Central Africa,
Sudan •
Andoharano Lehtinen, 1967 –
Botswana,
Madagascar,
Namibia,
South Africa •
Antilloides Brescovit, Sánchez-Ruiz & Alayón, 2016 –
Cuba,
Dominican Rep.
Mexico,
Puerto Rico,
Virgin Islands •
Filistata Latreille, 1810 – Australia, Asia, Europe. Introduced to
Azores,
Venezuela,
Yemen (Socotra) •
Filistatinella Gertsch & Ivie, 1936 – Mexico,
United States •
Filistatoides F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1899 – Cuba, Mexico,
Guatemala •
Kukulcania Lehtinen, 1967 – North, Central, South America •
Labahitha Zonstein,
Marusik & Magalhaes, 2017 – Asia, Oceania. Introduced to Mexico. •
Lihuelistata Ramírez & Grismado, 1997 –
Argentina •
Microfilistata Zonstein, 1990 – Iran,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan •
Pholcoides Roewer, 1960 – India, Tajikistan,
Afghanistan,
China,
Pakistan •
Pikelinia Mello-Leitão, 1946 – South America •
Pritha Lehtinen, 1967 –
Eurasia •
Sahastata Benoit, 1968 – Algeria to India,
Kenya •
Tricalamus Wang, 1987 – Afghanistan, China,
Japan •
Wandella Gray, 1994 – Australia •
Yardiella Gray, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia) •
Zaitunia Lehtinen, 1967 – Greece to India, Egypt ==References==