2019
DOI: 10.3897/zookeys.819.26391
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Araneae of Canada

Abstract: In 1979 nearly 1400 spider species in 32 families either had been recorded (1249) or were believed to occur (~140) in Canada. Twenty years later, although significant progress had been made in survey efforts in some regions, Canada’s spider inventory had only increased by approximately 7% to roughly 1500 species known or expected to occur. The family count had increased to 38 but only two additions were truly novel (five family additions and one family deletion were the result of advances in family-level syste… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…data). Surveys of spiders in British Columbia, including at high elevations, in recent years have resulted in many new Canadian and provincial records (R Bennett et al 2019b). There are many other examples of ongoing short-and long-term surveys in Canada that continue to yield new records of species.…”
Section: Surveysmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…data). Surveys of spiders in British Columbia, including at high elevations, in recent years have resulted in many new Canadian and provincial records (R Bennett et al 2019b). There are many other examples of ongoing short-and long-term surveys in Canada that continue to yield new records of species.…”
Section: Surveysmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…comm. ), Paquin et al (2010) for Araneae (with subsequent updates; see R Bennett et al (2019b) for details), Bousquet et al (2013) for Coleoptera, Pohl et al (2018) for Lepidoptera, and A Bennett et al (in prep. ) for Hymenoptera.…”
Section: Species Checklistsmentioning
confidence: 99%