Escadabiidae
Escadabiidae is a small neotropical family of the harvestman infraorder Grassatores with six described species.[1]
Escadabiidae | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Phylum: | |
Class: | |
Order: | |
Suborder: | |
Infraorder: | |
Superfamily: | |
Family: | Escadabiidae Kury & Pérez in Kury, 2003 |
Species | |
See text for list. | |
Diversity | |
4 genera, 6 species |
Description
Escadabiidae are about three millimeters long, with short legs and weak chelicerae.[1]
Distribution
All known members of this group are endemic to Brazil. The as yet undescribed species in this family expand the range to the coast of Ceará State and caves in the dry central part of Minas Gerais, where the cave-dwelling species could represent an example of relictual distribution.[1]
Name
The name of the type genus Escadabius is combined from the type locality Escada (Pernambuco, Brazil) and Ancient Greek bios "living".[1]
Species
- Baculigerus H. E. M. Soares, 1979
- Baculigerus litoris H. E. M. Soares, 1979
- Escadabius Roewer, 1949
- Escadabius schubarti Roewer, 1949
- Escadabius spinicoxa Roewer, 1949
- Escadabius ventricalcaratus Roewer, 1949
- Jim H. E. M. Soares, 1979
- Jim benignus H. E. M. Soares, 1979
- Recifesius H. E. M. Soares, 1978
- Recifesius pernambucanus H. E. M. Soares, 1978
Footnotes
- Kury, Adriano B. & Pérez Gonzales, Abel (2007): Escadabiidae Kury & Pérez in Kury, 2003. In: Pinto-da-Rocha et al. 2007: 191ff
gollark: People generally mean "encrypted from client to other client", though.
gollark: End-to-end in the sense of "encrypted from client to server", sure.
gollark: E2E is end to end encryption. It's where your message is encrypted between the sender and receiver and not decrypted in the middle. Some messaging apps do that. The point is that the service can't read it.
gollark: Oh, credit card? I don't think that's actually true.
gollark: What do you mean CC?
References
- Joel Hallan's Biology Catalog: Escadabiidae
- 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.