Aterigena
Aterigena is a genus of funnel weavers first described by A. Bolzern, A. Hänggi & D. Burckhardt in 2010.[2] The name is an anagram of Tegenaria.[2] It was created in 2010 for a group of Tegenaria and Malthonica species that formed a clade in a phylogenetic analysis. The genus was later found to be monophyletic, further separating Eratigena from Tegenaria and Malthonica.[2]
Aterigena | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Agelenidae |
Genus: | Aterigena Bolzern, Hänggi & Burckhardt, 2010[1] |
Type species | |
A. ligurica (Simon, 1916) | |
Species | |
5, see text |
Species
As of April 2019 it contains five species:[1]
- Aterigena aculeata (Wang, 1992) – China
- Aterigena aliquoi (Brignoli, 1971) – Italy (Sicily)
- Aterigena aspromontensis Bolzern, Hänggi & Burckhardt, 2010 – Italy
- Aterigena ligurica (Simon, 1916) – France, Italy
- Aterigena soriculata (Simon, 1873) – France (Corsica), Italy (Sardinia)
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gollark: Is it going to just send a description of what to draw? In that case, lots of overhead and problems porting to different environments since for example each GUI framework will end up needing its own module communication layer.
gollark: For one thing, is a module just going to be allowed somehow to draw on the region of the screen it's meant to be set up for?
gollark: Yes it is.
gollark: These "modules", they could communicate over some sort of unified IPC framework with some standard format or whatever, but probably each language/framework would end up having to implement its own method of rendering what gets sent over.
References
- "Gen. Aterigena Bolzern, Hänggi & Burckhardt, 2010". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
- Bolzern, A.; Hänggi, A.; Burckhardt, D. (2010). "Aterigena, a new genus of funnel-web spider, shedding some light on the Tegenaria-Malthonica problem (Araneae: Agelenidae)". Journal of Arachnology. 38 (2): 162–182. doi:10.1636/A09-78.1.
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