Biology:List of Deinopidae species

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Main page: Biology:Deinopidae

This page lists all described species of the spider family Deinopidae accepted by the World Spider Catalog (As of December 2020):[1]

Asianopis

Asianopis Lin & Li, 2020

  • A. aruensis (Roewer, 1938) — Indonesia (Aru Is.)
  • A. celebensis (Merian, 1911) — Indonesia (Sulawesi)
  • A. dumogae (Merian, 1911) — Indonesia (Sulawesi)
  • A. goalparaensis (Tikader & Malhotra, 1978) — India
  • A. konplong (Logunov, 2018) — Vietnam
  • A. liukuensis (Yin, Griswold & Yan, 2002) — India, China
  • A. wangi Lin & Li, 2020 — China (Hainan)
  • A. wuchaoi Lin & Li, 2020 — China
  • A. zhuanghaoyuni Lin & Li, 2020 (type) — China

† Deinopedes

Deinopedes Wunderlich, 2017[2] — Cretaceous Burmese amber

  • D. tranquillus Wunderlich, 2017

Deinopis

Deinopis
Deinopis madagascariensis

Deinopis MacLeay, 1839

  • D. amica Schiapelli & Gerschman, 1957 — Argentina, Uruguay
  • D. anchietae Brito Capello, 1867 — West Africa, Angola, South Africa
  • D. armaticeps Mello-Leitão, 1925 — Brazil
  • D. aspectans Pocock, 1900 — Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, DR Congo, South Africa
  • D. aurita F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1902 — Mexico
  • D. biaculeata Simon, 1906 — Brazil
  • D. bituberculata Franganillo, 1930 — Cuba
  • D. bucculenta Schenkel, 1953 — Venezuela
  • D. camela Thorell, 1881 — New Guinea
  • D. cornigera Gerstaecker, 1873 — Ethiopia, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, South Africa
  • D. cylindracea C. L. Koch, 1846 — Colombia
  • D. cylindrica Pocock, 1898 — Mozambique, South Africa
  • D. diabolica Kraus, 1956 — El Salvador
  • D. fasciata L. Koch, 1879 — Australia (Queensland)
  • D. fasciculigera Simon, 1909 — Vietnam
  • D. fastigata Simon, 1906 — Brazil
  • D. giltayi Lessert, 1930 — Congo
  • D. granadensis Keyserling, 1879 — Colombia
  • D. guasca Mello-Leitão, 1943 — Brazil
  • D. guianensis Taczanowski, 1874 — French Guiana
  • D. guineensis Berland & Millot, 1940 — Guinea
  • D. kollari Doleschall, 1859 — Myanmar, Indonesia (Ambon)
  • D. labangan Barrion-Dupo & Barrion, 2018 — Philippines
  • D. lamia MacLeay, 1839 (type) — Cuba, Puerto Rico
  • D. longipalpula Strand, 1913 — Central Africa
  • D. longipes F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1902 — Mexico to Panama
  • D. luzonensis Barrion-Dupo & Barrion, 2018 — Philippines
  • D. madagascariensis Lenz, 1886 — Madagascar
  • D. mediocris Kulczyński, 1908 — New Guinea
  • D. ornata Pocock, 1902 — Ethiopia
  • D. pallida Mello-Leitão, 1939 — Brazil
  • D. pardalis Simon, 1906 — Brazil
  • D. plurituberculata Mello-Leitão, 1925 — Brazil
  • D. ravida L. Koch, 1878 — Australia (Queensland)
  • D. reticulata (Rainbow, 1899) — New Guinea
  • D. rodophthalma Mello-Leitão, 1939 — Brazil
  • D. schomburgki Karsch, 1878 — Australia (South Australia)
  • D. schoutedeni Giltay, 1929 — Congo
  • D. seriata Simon, 1906 — Brazil
  • D. spinosa Marx, 1889 — USA, St. Vincent, Venezuela
  • D. subrufa L. Koch, 1878 — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales, Tasmania), New Zealand
  • D. tabida L. Koch, 1879 — Australia (Queensland)
  • D. tuboculata Franganillo, 1926 — Cuba
  • D. unicolor L. Koch, 1878 — Australia (Western Australia)

Menneus

Menneus Simon, 1876

  • M. aussie Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales), New Caledonia
  • M. bituberculatus Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Queensland), possibly New Guinea
  • M. camelus Pocock, 1902 — South Africa
  • M. capensis (Purcell, 1904) — South Africa
  • M. darwini Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Tanzania
  • M. dromedarius Purcell, 1904 — South Africa, Madagascar
  • M. nemesio Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (New South Wales)
  • M. neocaledonicus (Simon, 1888) — New Caledonia
  • M. quasimodo Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • M. samperi Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — East Africa
  • M. superciliosus (Thorell, 1881) — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales)
  • M. tetragnathoides Simon, 1876 (type) — Angola, Malawi, Tanzania
  • M. trinodosus Rainbow, 1920 — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales, Lord Howe Is.)
  • M. wa Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • M. pietrzeniukae Wunderlich, 2004

References

  1. "Family: Deinopidae C. L. Koch,1850". Natural History Museum Bern. 2021. doi:10.24436/2. http://www.wsc.nmbe.ch/family/25. Retrieved 2021-01-25. 
  2. Behrensmeyer, A. K.; Turner, A. (2013). "Taxonomic occurrences of Suidae recorded in the Paleobiology Database". Fossilworks. http://www.fossilworks.org/cgi-bin/bridge.pl?action=home. Retrieved 2021-01-25.