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Certain species are commonly known as the "yellow sac spider".
It is, however, an area where Yellow Sac spiders can be found.
Some yellow sac spiders are attracted to the smell of volatiles in gasoline.
These include the black-footed yellow sac spider and the Southern house spider.
C. mildei is commonly known as the yellow sac spider, a name it shares with many other spiders of its genus.
The hobo spider and the yellow sac spider have also been reported to cause necrotic bites.
Examples include the Hobo spider and the Yellow Sac spider.
Yellow Sac spider, Chiracanthium inclusum, a common house spider worldwide.
While both the yellow sac spiders and Hobo spider are often claimed to possess necrotic venom, these claims have been challenged.
A few spiders of note Hentz classified are the Yellow sac spider and the Southern house spider.
The Yellow Sac spiders, Cheiracanthium sp., take shelter in silk tubes during the daytime and generally come out to hunt at night.
Cheiracanthium punctorium, one of several species commonly known as the yellow sac spider, is a spider found from central Europe to Central Asia.
One possible explanation for the disproportionate amount of misdiagnosed bites is the Cheiracanthium inclusum, also known as the Black-Footed Yellow Sac spider.
The yellow sac spider, Cheiracanthium inclusum, has been studied more than the other species in regard to its role in controlling pest insects in the southeastern United States.
A recent study of 20 confirmed yellow sac spider bites revealed no evidence of necrosis; further review of international literature on confirmed bites revealed only a single bite with mild necrotic symptoms.
Spider species blamed for necrosis in the past have included wolf spiders, white-tailed spiders, black house spiders, yellow sac spiders, orb weavers, and funnel-weaving spiders such as the hobo spider.
Vetter R, Isbister G, Bush SP, Boutin LJ (2006): Verified bites by yellow sac spiders (genus Cheiracanthium) in the United States and Australia: Where is the necrosis?
It has been noted that a large number of bites attributed to the brown recluse spider may actually be the result of yellow sac spider bites, which possess a cytotoxic venom known to contain several proteolytic enzymes including alkaline phosphatase, deoxyribonuclease, esterase, hyaluronidase, lipase, and ribonuclease.
Cheiracanthium punctorium, one of several species commonly known as the yellow sac spider, is a spider found from central Europe to Central Asia.