Araneidae: Perbedaan antara revisi
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{{Italic title}}
{{Automatic taxobox
| image = Argiope catenulata at Kadavoor.jpg▼
| name = Araneidae▼
▲| image =Argiope catenulata at Kadavoor.jpg
| image_caption = ''[[Argiope catenulata]]''
| diversity = 168 genus, 3.006 spesies▼
| diversity_ref = <ref name="platnick" />▼
| familia_authority = [[Eugène Simon|Simon]], 1895▼
| diversity_link = Daftar spesies Araneidae
▲| diversity_ref =<ref name="platnick" />
▲| diversity = 168 genus, 3.006 spesies
| subdivision_ranks = Sejumlah genus terkenal▼
| range_map = Distribution.araneidae.1.png
▲| subdivision_ranks = Sejumlah genus terkenal
}}
'''Araneidae''' atau '''penganyam bola''' adalah nama Latin untuk [[famili (biologi)|famili]] [[laba-laba]] pembuat sarang berbentuk roda yang paling sering ditemukan, di taman, ladang maupun hutan. Bentuk sarangnya khas menyerupai lingkaran sehingga takson ini dulunya juga dinamakan '''Orbiculariae'''.
Laba-laba dari keluarga ini mempunyai 8 mata yang serupa, kaki yang berbulu atau berduri, dan tidak mempunyai organ [[
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However, orb-webs are also produced by members of other families. The large golden orb-weavers ([[Nephilidae]]) and the long-jawed orb weavers ([[Tetragnathidae]]) were formerly included in the Araneidae; they are indeed closely related to them, being part of [[Taxonomic rank|superfamily]] [[Araneoidea]]. Their webs are similar to those of the typical orb-weavers, but tend to be less sophisticated and often have an irregular instead of a neat spiral arrangement of the prey-capturing threads. The cribellate or hackled orb-weavers ([[Uloboridae]]) belong to a distinct superfamily of the [[suborder]] [[Araneomorphae]]; their webs are often very sophisticated, but Uloboridae use neither venom to kill their prey, nor sticky threads in their web, and probably [[evolution|evolved]] the orb structure independently. Uloboridae are [[cribellate]], and their threads can be recognized by the fuzzy and dull appearance, which captures prey by a [[velcro]]-like mechanism.
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==The orb-web==
--><!-- (Not identified, of questionable use) [[File:garden_orb_weaver.jpg|thumb|Orb weaver resting in web]]-->
[[Berkas:Argiope sp.jpg|jmpl|''Argiope'' sp. duduk pada [[
[[Berkas:Orb weaver spiderlings.jpg|jmpl|Anak-anak laba-laba di sarang dekat tempat menetas]]
[[Berkas:Eriophora sp 2.jpg|jmpl|Close-up [[cephalothorax]] pada ''[[Eriophora]]'' sp. (kemungkinan ''[[Eriophora heroine|E. heroine]]'' atau ''[[Eriophora pustuosa|E. pustuosa]]'']]
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The two families, Deinopoidea and Araneoidea, have similar behavioral sequences and spinning apparatuses to produce architecturally similar webs. The Araneidae weave true viscid silk with an aqueous glue property, and the Deinopoidea use dry fibrils and sticky silk.<ref name="Garb"/><ref>{{cite book |author=William A. Shear |year=1986 |chapter=The evolution of web-building behavior in spiders: a third generation of hypotheses |pages=364–400 |editor=William A. Shear |title=Spiders: webs, behavior, and evolution |publisher=[[Stanford University Press]] |location=Stanford, California |isbn=978-0-8047-1203-3 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=rc6Vz-cWickC&pg=PA364}}</ref> The Deinopoidea (including the Uloboridae), have a [[cribellum]] – a flat, complex spinning plate from which the cribellate silk is released. They also have a [[calamistrum]] – an apparatus of bristles used to comb the cribellate silk from the cribellum. The Araneoidea, or the "ecribellate" spiders, do not have these two structures. The two families of orb-weaving spiders are morphologically very distinct, yet there is much similarity between their web form and web construction behavior. The cribellates retained the ancestral character, yet the cribellum was lost in the escribellates. The lack of a functional cribellum in araneoids is most likely [[synapomorphic]]. If the orb-weaver spiders are a [[monophyletic group]], the fact that only some species in the group lost a feature adds to the controversy. The cribellates are split off as a separate taxon that retained the primitive feature, which makes the lineage [[paraphyletic]] and not synonymous with any real evolutionary lineage. The morphological and behavioral evidence surrounding orb webs led to the disagreement over a single origin or a dual origin.<ref>{{cite book |author=Jonathan A. Coddington |year=1986 |chapter=The monophyletic origin of the orb web |pages=319–363 |editor=William A. Shear |title=Spiders: webs, behavior, and evolution |publisher=[[Stanford University Press]] |location=Stanford, California |isbn=978-0-8047-1203-3 |url=http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=rc6Vz-cWickC&pg=PA319}}</ref> However, molecular analysis provides more support for a [[monophyletic]] origin.<ref name="Blackledge_2009"/><ref name="Garb"/><ref name="Penney"/>
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== Sistematika ==
{{main|Daftar spesies Araneidae}}
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* [[Argiope]]
* [[Argiopinae]]
* [[Cyrtarachninae]] <small>Simon</small>
:* [[Cyrtarachnini]] <small>Simon</small>
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* [[Cyrtophorinae]]
* [[Gasteracanthinae]]
:* [[Caerostrini]]
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* [[Micratheninae]]
* ''[[incertae sedis]]''
:* ''[[Artonis]]'' <small>Simon, 1895</small>
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