Epiocheirata

Epiocheirata is a suborder of pseudoscorpions in the order Pseudoscorpiones. There are about 5 families and at least 740 described species in Epiocheirata.[1][2][3]

Epiocheirata
Neopseudogarypus scutellatus, Tasmania
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Pseudoscorpiones
Suborder: Epiocheirata
Harvey, 1992

Families

These five families belong to the suborder Epiocheirata:[2][3]

gollark: The advanced ones are an add-on.
gollark: The pack's overall tiers at least require fairly diverse things on each tier. The inscribers would, if I cared about that, be interesting to automate through ME subnetting and such. Thermal Expansion has fairly weak gating (internally) behind hardened glass stuff.
gollark: It's not that it's annoying. It's that it's really bland and uninteresting.
gollark: The only differences are that the later ones are faster and produce other crystals.
gollark: *And so on up to tier 6*.

References

  1. "Epiocheirata Suborder Information". BugGuide.net. Retrieved 2018-03-08.
  2. "Epiocheirata Report". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 2018-03-08.
  3. "Epiocheirata Overview". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 2018-03-08.

Further reading

  • Capinera, John L., ed. (2008). Encyclopedia of Entomology. Springer. ISBN 978-1402062421.
  • Comstock, John Henry (1912). The spider book: A manual for the study of the spiders and their near relatives, the scorpions, pseudoscorpions, whip-scorpions, harvestmen, and other members of the class arachnida, found in America North of Mexico, with analytical keys for their clas... ISBN 978-1295195817.
  • Harvey, Mark S. (1992). "The phylogeny and classification of the Pseudoscorpionida (Chelicerata : Arachnida)". Invertebrate Taxonomy. 6 (6): 1373–1435. ISSN 0818-0164.
  • Harvey, Mark S. (2002). "The neglected cousins: what do we know about the smaller arachnid orders?". The Journal of Arachnology. 30 (2): 357–372. doi:10.1636/0161-8202(2002)030[0357:TNCWDW]2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0161-8202.
  • Jackman, John A. (2002). A Field Guide to Spiders and Scorpions of Texas. Gulf Publishing. ISBN 978-0877192640.


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