- Arbanitis longipes 'Longlegged' Trapdoor Spider Female, from above
- Arbanitis longipes Female In silk-lined burrow entrance, Mt Glorious
- Arbanitis cf. gwennethae, female, Nowra NSW
- Arbanitis gracilis, female, Copacabana NSW
- Arbanitis gracilis Gunmetal Trapdoor Spider Central coast NSW, 30mm
- Arbanitis sp., female, Bellthorpe SEQ
- Arbanitis sp. nov, female, Copacabana NSW
- Arbanitis sp., female, Mt Tamborine SEQ
- Arbanitis sp. nov, female, Barrington tops NSW
- Female Mt Kilcoy Qld
- Female Rewan Qld
- Juv Amamoor Qld
- Koch & Keyserling (Die Arachniden Australiens)
Arbanitis longipes 'Longlegged' Trapdoor Spider Female, from above
A large spider with no door to its burrow found in exposed slopes with little leaf litter in South East Queensland.It is recognised by golden hairs on the head. Males have relatively long thin legs and spines on the first leg as protection during mating. Burrows of females, 40cm deep, are found in exposed areas with little leaf cover. Burrows of juveniles may be found clustered within 30cm of a larger burrow, presumably their mother's. This spider cannot climb smooth vertical surfaces. In the literature this spider was supposedly from Bowen but never found there, the location recorded incorrectly. In 1988 Robert Raven of Queensland Museum recognised the Hamburg holotype as a common spider in South East Queensland .♀ 25mm ♂ 25mm
Arbanitis longipes Female In silk-lined burrow entrance, Mt Glorious
Arbanitis hirsutus Hairy Trapdoor Spider
The Hairy Trapdoor Spider is known from the type locality, Kedron Brook.