Summary for Arctosa alpigena (Araneae)

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National Distribution

 
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Identification difficulty rating: 4
Name: Arctosa alpigena
Authority: (Doleschall, 1852)
Order: Arachnida: Araneae
Family: Lycosidae
National Rarity status: NR
IUCN status: VU, criteria: B2ab(ii)

Records: 45
First Record: 1872
Latest Record: 2013

1992-on hectads: 6
Pre-1992 hectads: 9
Total hectads: 13

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About this species

Recorded altitude range
850m to 1130m

Species text

Distribution
The species was originally recorded from a mountain near Braemar, South Aberdeenshire, in 1872, as Trochosa biunguiculata. It has since been found in South Aberdeenshire, Banffshire, East Inverness-shire, West Inverness-shire, East Ross, West Ross and Perthshire. The species is well established in the Cairngorms, though probably rather local. The strongest population known is on the south slopes of Cairngorm. The spider is also known from France, Switzerland, Austria, Hungary, Sweden, Norway, Finland and Iceland.

Habitat and ecology
High mountain plateaux. Found on mountains above 1,000 metres, in silk tubes in densely matted vegetation dominated by Empetrum or Nardus stricta, with Vaccinium, Cladonia, Racomitrium, etc. Trapping on Creag Meagaidh showed it to be most frequent in Nardus stricta snow-bed grassland (which was also the habitat on Sgurr nan Clach Geala) and to a lesser extent in Racomitrium lanuginosum moss heath. The spiders spend much of their time below the vegetation mat and are only occasionally seen running in the open. Adults of both sexes have been found in June and July, and females also in May and until the end of August.

Status
Recorded from four locations since 1992 and showing a decline in area of occupancy of 67% (or 56%?) from nine hectads before 1992 to four hectads since that date. The low number of locations with recent records might suggest the species is Endangered but the specialised high-altitude habitat may be under-recorded, especially as warm sunshine is needed to encourage the spider out into the open. A programme of pitfall trapping is usually needed to establish its presence. Therefore the spider has been considered Vulnerable.

Threats
The high altitude vegetation which forms the habitat of this species is fragile and slow growing, and prone to damage from hill walkers and skiers. Climate change may threaten the long-term survival of this species.

Management and conservation
Protect alpine vegetation from damage associated with recreational development.

Text based on Dawson, I.K., Harvey, P.R., Merrett, P. & Russell-Smith, A.R. (in prep.).  References

Adult Season

Adult Season Data (based on 7 records with adult season information)


Habitats

background methodology

Broad Habitat Data (based on 8 records with habitat information)

no subhabitat data available

Structural Habitat Data (based on 5 records with structural habitat information)

no habitat detail or method data available

Recorded management for locations with Arctosa alpigena

Recorded substrate and hydrology for locations with Arctosa alpigena

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