Desognaphosa

Desognaphosa is a genus of spiders in the family Trochanteriidae. It was first described in 2002 by Platnick. As of 2017, it contains 26 species, most found in Queensland. D. solomani is found in the Solomon Islands; D. yabbra is found in Queensland and New South Wales.[1]

Desognaphosa
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Trochanteriidae
Genus: Desognaphosa
Platnick[1]
Type species
Desognaphosa yabbra
Species

26, see text

Species

Desognaphosa comprises the following species:[1]

  • Desognaphosa bartle Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa bellenden Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa boolbun Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa bulburin Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa carbine Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa dryander Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa eungella Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa finnigan Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa funnel Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa goonaneman Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa halcyon Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa homerule Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa karnak Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa kirrama Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa kroombit Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa kuranda Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa malbon Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa massey Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa millaa Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa pershouse Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa solomoni Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa spurgeon Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa tribulation Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa tyson Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa windsor Platnick, 2002
  • Desognaphosa yabbra Platnick, 2002
gollark: I guess I can take that if nobody else wants it, but I'd have to throw away another random AP egg.
gollark: When's the ToD?
gollark: I'm tempted to just incubate all my eggs to grab ND experimental stuff now.
gollark: Unless you count specific codes, which you probably don't.
gollark: *tries to think of others, fails*

References

  1. "Trochanteriidae". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 2017-03-20.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.