, it contains twenty-four species: •
Erigonoplus castellanus (
O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1875) – Portugal, Spain •
Erigonoplus depressifrons (
Simon, 1884) – Spain, France •
Erigonoplus dilatus (
Denis, 1950) – Andorra •
Erigonoplus foveatus (
Dahl, 1912) – Europe, Russia (Europe, Caucasus) •
Erigonoplus globipes (
L. Koch, 1872) – Europe, Turkey, Armenia, Georgia •
Erigonoplus ibericus Bosmans & Déjean, 2022 – Portugal, Spain •
Erigonoplus inclarus (Simon, 1881) (
type) – France (Corsica) •
Erigonoplus inspinosus Wunderlich, 1995 – Greece •
Erigonoplus jarmilae (Miller, 1943) – Austria, Czech Rep., Slovakia, Albania, Russia (Europe, Caucasus) •
Erigonoplus justus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1875) – Belgium, France, Germany •
Erigonoplus kirghizicus Tanasevitch, 1989 – Kazakhstan •
Erigonoplus latefissus (Denis, 1968) – Morocco •
Erigonoplus minaretifer Eskov, 1986 – Russia (Middle, north-eastern Siberia) •
Erigonoplus nasutus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1879) – Portugal, France •
Erigonoplus nigrocaeruleus (Simon, 1882) – France (Corsica), Italy (Sardinia, mainland) •
Erigonoplus ninae Tanasevitch & Fet, 1986 – Turkmenistan, Iran •
Erigonoplus nobilis Thaler, 1991 – Italy •
Erigonoplus sengleti Tanasevitch, 2008 – Iran •
Erigonoplus setosus Wunderlich, 1995 – Croatia, Greece •
Erigonoplus sibiricus Eskov &
Marusik, 1997 – Russia (South Siberia) •
Erigonoplus simplex Millidge, 1979 – Italy, Albania, Bulgaria, Greece •
Erigonoplus spinifemuralis Dimitrov, 2003 – Greece (incl. Crete), Albania, North Macedonia, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Russia (Europe), Turkey •
Erigonoplus turriger (Simon, 1882) – France, Spain •
Erigonoplus zagros Tanasevitch, 2009 – Iran ==References==