Berinda
Berinda is a genus of ground spiders that was first described by Carl Friedrich Roewer in 1928.[2]
Berinda | |
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Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Gnaphosidae |
Genus: | Berinda Roewer, 1928[1] |
Type species | |
B. amabilis Roewer, 1928 | |
Species | |
7, see text |
Species
As of May 2019 it contains seven species in Mediterranean Europe and the near East:[1]
- Berinda aegilia Chatzaki, 2002 – Greece
- Berinda amabilis Roewer, 1928 (type) – Greece (Crete)
- Berinda cooki Logunov, 2012 – Turkey
- Berinda cypria Chatzaki & Panayiotou, 2010 – Cyprus
- Berinda ensigera (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1874) – Greece (incl. Crete), Turkey
- Berinda hakani Chatzaki & Seyyar, 2010 – Turkey
- Berinda idae Lissner, 2016 – Greece
gollark: Or, well, human languages™.
gollark: Unicode™!
gollark: Yes, that is actually B.
gollark: Advantages of 128-character full-charset names:- /view/n/ pages would still only hold one unique dragon- greater opportunities for creativity via use of anomalous Unicode- essentially infinite quantity of available names- can reuse names through use of invisible characters and/or homoglyphs- more efficient lyrical lineages - fewer dragons required per word- could store 2048 bits of data per name via base65536- can name them after people/things in other languagesDisadvantages:~~- cannot actually distinguish some names without a hexdump or something- pretty hard for people to actually use without knowledge of ridiculous Unicode stuff~~ none whatsoever
gollark: Yep!
References
- "Gen. Berinda Roewer, 1928". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-06-04.
- Roewer, C. F. (1928), "Araneae", Zoologische Streifzüge in Attika, Morea, und besonders auf der Insel Kreta, II
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