Dolophones
Dolophones is a genus of orb-weaver spiders first described by Charles Athanase Walckenaer in 1837.[2]
Dolophones | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Araneidae |
Genus: | Dolophones Walckenaer, 1837[1] |
Type species | |
D. notacantha (Quoy & Gaimarg, 1824) | |
Species | |
17, see text |
Species
As of April 2019 it contains seventeen species:[1]
- Dolophones bituberculata Lamb, 1911 – Australia (Queensland)
- Dolophones clypeata (L. Koch, 1871) – Indonesia (Moluccas), Australia
- Dolophones conifera (Keyserling, 1886) – Australia
- Dolophones elfordi Dunn & Dunn, 1946 – Australia (Victoria)
- Dolophones intricata Rainbow, 1915 – Australia (South Australia)
- Dolophones macleayi (Bradley, 1876) – Australia (Queensland)
- Dolophones mammeata (Keyserling, 1886) – Australia
- Dolophones maxima Hogg, 1900 – Australia (Victoria)
- Dolophones nasalis (Butler, 1876) – Australia (Queensland)
- Dolophones notacantha (Quoy & Gaimarg, 1824) – Australia (New South Wales)
- Dolophones peltata (Keyserling, 1886) – Australia (mainland, Lord Howe Is.)
- Dolophones pilosa (Keyserling, 1886) – Australia
- Dolophones simpla (Keyserling, 1886) – Australia (New South Wales)
- Dolophones testudinea (L. Koch, 1871) – Australia, New Caledonia
- Dolophones thomisoides Rainbow, 1915 – Australia (South Australia)
- Dolophones tuberculata (Keyserling, 1886) – Australia (New South Wales)
- Dolophones turrigera (L. Koch, 1867) – Australia (Queensland, New South Wales)
gollark: Because the differential equations are linear, and the equations work that way.
gollark: i.e. if feeding in input A gives output X, and input B gives output Y, then feeding in A+B gives X+Y.
gollark: But linear/passive circuits *do* obey the "principle of superposition".
gollark: Not all components meaningfully have "resistance".
gollark: I'm sure you can make it work somehow.
References
- "Gen. Dolophones Walckenaer, 1837". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 2019-05-13.
- Walckenaer, C. A. (1837). Cite journal requires
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