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<dc:identifier>urn:lsid:ubio.org:namebank:2079414</dc:identifier>
<dc:source>http://www.canadianarachnology.org/data/spiders/21998</dc:source>
<dwc:Kingdom>Animalia</dwc:Kingdom>
<dwc:Phylum>Arthropoda</dwc:Phylum>
<dwc:Class>Arachnida</dwc:Class>
<dwc:Order>Araneae</dwc:Order>
<dwc:Family>Hahniidae</dwc:Family>
<dwc:ScientificName>Neoantistea agilis (Keyserling, 1887)</dwc:ScientificName>
<dcterms:modified>2006-03-24T22:21:10Z</dcterms:modified>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Chickering, A. M. 1963 The Hahniidae (Araneae) of Michigan.  <i>Pap. Michigan Acad. Sci. Arts Lett.</i> <b>48:</b> 65-72.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Comstock, J. H. 1912 <i>The spider book; a manual for the study of the spiders and their near relatives, the scorpions, pseudoscorpions, whipscorpions, harvestmen and other members of the class Arachnida, found in America north of Mexico, with analytical keys for their classification and popular accounts of their habits.</i> Garden City, New York, pp. 1-721]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Emerton, J. H. 1902 <i>The common spiders of the United States</i>.  Boston, pp. 1-225.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Emerton, J. H. 1890 New England spiders of the families Drassidae, Agalenidae and Dysderidae.  <i>Trans. Connect. Acad. Arts Sci.</i> <b>8:</b> 166-206.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Gertsch, W. J. 1934 Some American spiders of the family Hahniidae.  <i>Amer. Mus. Novit.</i> <b>712:</b> 1-32.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Kaston, B. J. 1948 Spiders of Connecticut.  <i>Bull. Conn. St. geol. nat. Hist. Surv.</i> <b>70:</b> 1-874.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Keyserling, E. 1887 Neue Spinnen aus America. VII.  <i>Verh. zool.-bot. Ges. Wien</i> <b>37:</b> 421-490.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Muma, M. H. 1945 New and interesting spiders from Maryland.  <i>Proc. biol. Soc. Wash.</i> <b>58:</b> 91-104.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Muma, M. H. 1943 <i>Common spiders of Maryland</i>.  Natural History Society of Maryland, Baltimore, 179 pp.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Opell, B. D. & J. A. Beatty. 1976 The Nearctic Hahniidae (Arachnida: Araneae).  <i>Bull. Mus. comp. Zool. Harv.</i> <b>147:</b> 393-433.]]>
</reference>
<reference>
<![CDATA[Paquin, P. & N. Dupérré. 2003 Guide d'identification des araignées de Québec.  <i>Fabreries, Suppl.</i> <b>11</b> 1-251.]]>
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<dc:title xml:lang="en">Distribution</dc:title> 
<dc:language>en</dc:language> 
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<audience>General public</audience>
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<dc:description xml:lang="en">USA, Canada</dc:description>  
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<dc:identifier>12.0001/21998-habitat</dc:identifier>
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<dc:title xml:lang="en">Habitat</dc:title> 
<dc:language>en</dc:language> 
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<dc:description xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[moist forest litter, depressions in soil and moss, under stones and wood (Opell &amp; Beatty, 1976).]]></dc:description>  
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<dc:identifier>12.0001/21998-diagnostic</dc:identifier>
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<dc:title xml:lang="en">Diagnostic Description</dc:title> 
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<dc:description xml:lang="en"><![CDATA[Male: Adult males can be distinguished from other species of <em>Neoantistea</em> (except <em>N. alachua</em> and <em>N. oklahomensis</em>) by the presence of a tibial apophysis with its lower 2/3 almost perpendicular to the tibia and by a narrow, curved spur on the patella of the palp&nbsp;about 1/2 as long as the tibial apophysis (Opell &amp; Beatty, 1976). Most specimens have 3 retromarginal teeth on each chelicera. Female: Oval- &amp; asymmetrically-shaped spermathecae with highly convoluted ducts (Opell &amp; Beatty, 1976). Females are generally larger than males, though measurements are not provided by Opell &amp; Beatty (1976).]]></dc:description>  
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