Epedanidae

Epedanidae is a family of the harvestman infraorder Grassatores with about 200 described species. They are the sister group of the Gonyleptoidea.[1]

Epedanidae
Temporal range: Cretaceous–present
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Suborder:
Infraorder:
Superfamily:
Assamioidea
Family:
Epedanidae

Sørensen, in L. Koch 1886
Genera

See text for list.

Diversity
70 genera, c. 200 species

The Epedanidae are endemic to Asia. The subfamily Dibuninae forms the predominant harvestman fauna of the Philippines. The other three subfamilies are more predominant in Indonesia, Malaysia and Thailand, and some are found in Burma and Nepal. Some species occur outside this region, in India, China, Vietnam and Japan.[1] One species is even endemic to New Guinea.[2]

Description

The body size ranges from two to five millimeters, with thin legs ranging from six to 26 mm. The chelicerae are heavy with strong teeth in both fingers. The pedipalps are long and strong, with powerful spines lining the inside of the claw. Most species are light brown with few black mottling. Some species possess white patches on the scutum. The pedipalps are much more heavily spined in males, together with a swollen cheliceral hand.[1]

Name

The type genus Epedanus is derived from Ancient Greek epedanos "weak, feeble".

Genera

For a list of all currently described species see List of Epedanidae species.

Dibuninae Roewer, 1912

  • Dibunus Loman, 1906

Epedaninae Sørensen, in L. Koch 1886

  • Alloepedanus S. Suzuki, 1985
  • Balabanus Suzuki, 1977
  • Caletorellus Roewer, 1938
  • Epedanellus Roewer, 1911
  • Epedanidus Roewer, 1945
  • Epedanulus Roewer, 1913
  • Epedanus Thorell, 1876
  • Euepedanus Roewer, 1915
  • Funkikoa Roewer, 1927
  • Heteroepedanus Roewer, 1912
  • Aboriscus Roewer, 1940
  • Lobonychium Roewer, 1938
  • Metathyreotus Roewer, 1913
  • Metepedanulus Roewer, 1913
  • Metepedanus Roewer, 1912
  • Mosfora Roewer, 1938
  • Nanepedanus Roewer, 1938
  • Neoepedanus Roewer, 1912
  • Paratakaoia S. Suzuki, 1985
  • Parepedanulus Roewer, 1913
  • Plistobunus Pocock, 1903
  • Pseudoepedanus Suzuki, 1969
  • Pseudomarthana P. D. Hillyard, 1985
  • Takaoia Roewer, 1911
  • Thyreotus Thorell, 1889
  • Toccolus Roewer, 1927
  • Zepedanulus Roewer, 1927

Acrobuninae Roewer, 1912

  • Acrobunus Thorell, 1891
  • Anacrobunus Roewer, 1927
  • Harpagonellus Roewer, 1927
  • Heterobiantes Roewer, 1912
  • Metacrobunus Roewer, 1915
  • Paracrobunus Suzuki, 1977

Sarasinicinae Roewer, 1923

  • Acanthepedanus Roewer, 1912
  • Albertops Roewer, 1938
  • Asopella Sørensen, 1932
  • Delicola Roewer, 1938
  • Gintingius Roewer, 1938
  • Kilungius Roewer, 1915
  • Koyanus Roewer, 1938
  • Kuchingius Roewer, 1927
  • Nobeoka Roewer, 1938
  • Opelytus Roewer, 1927
  • Padangcola Roewer, 1963
  • Panticola Roewer, 1938
  • Parepedanus Roewer, 1912
  • Pasohnus Suzuki, 1976
  • Pseudobiantes Hirst, 1911
  • Punanus Roewer, 1938
  • Sarasinica Strand, 1914
  • Sembilanus Roewer, 1938
  • Sinistus Roewer, 1938
  • Siponnus Roewer, 1927
  • Sungsotia Tsurusaki, 1995
  • Tegestria Roewer, 1936
  • Tonkinatus Roewer, 1938

incertae sedis

  • Beloniscellus Roewer, 1912
  • Beloniscops Roewer, 1949
  • Belonisculus Roewer, 1923
  • Beloniscus Thorell, 1891
  • Buparellus Roewer, 1949
  • Bupares Thorell, 1889
  • Dhaulagirius Martens, 1977
  • Dumaguetes Roewer, 1927
  • Parabeloniscus Suzuki, 1967
  • Parabupares S. Suzuki, 1982
  • Sotekia S. Suzuki, 1982
  • Tithaeus Thorell, 1890
  • Tokunosia Suzuki, 1964

Footnotes

  1. Kury, Adriano B. (2007): Epedanidae. Sørensen, 1886. In: Pinto-da-Rocha et al. 2007: 188ff
  2. Hallan Biology Catalog
gollark: They biased it heavily toward singlecore when AMD started releasing high core count things cheaply.
gollark: They have not, in fact, made something 50 times more powerful than all competitors.
gollark: "Metal score" sounds like they're using Metal, i.e. the *GPU* abstraction layer on macOS.
gollark: Ah, it says here that many of Apple's people got hired by "Nuvia" which then got acquired by Qualcomm somehow.
gollark: The A15 apparently uses basically identical cores to its predecessor.

References

  • Joel Hallan's Biology Catalog: Epedanidae
  • Pinto-da-Rocha, R., Machado, G. & Giribet, G. (eds.) (2007): Harvestmen - The Biology of Opiliones. Harvard University Press ISBN 0-674-02343-9
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.