#1999 - Lampona cylindrata - White-tailed Spider
The genus name comes from the Latin lampo ("to shine") although I don't know why the original taxonomist chose that. Cylindrata refers to the cylindric body shape, while murinus means "mouse-gray" in Latin and is appropriate for the sister species with the same common name.
I'm a bit surprised I haven't covered these before (unless the posts got eaten by the Great Tumbr Purge). Both cylindrata and the very similar murina are widespread around Australia,and have also been introduced to New Zealand.
The 60-odd species are vagrant hunters, with prey that includes other spiders, but their main claim to fame is a completely undiserved reputation for bites that cause necrotic lesions. They can certainly bite humans, and effects including a red marks, local itchiness, swelling and pain, and very occasionally nausea, vomiting, malaise or headache, but a study of over 130 confirmed White-tail bites found no associated lesions.








