Idioctis

Idioctis is a genus of brushed trapdoor spiders that was first described by L. Koch in 1874.[3]

Idioctis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Mygalomorphae
Family: Barychelidae
Genus: Idioctis
L. Koch, 1874[1]
Type species
I. helva
L. Koch, 1874
Species

9, see text

Synonyms[1]
  • Atrophonysia Benoit & Legendre, 1968[2]

Species

As of April 2019, it contains nine species:[1]

  • Idioctis eniwetok Raven, 1988 – Marshall Is., Caroline Is.
  • Idioctis ferrophila Churchill & Raven, 1992 – New Caledonia
  • Idioctis helva L. Koch, 1874 (type) – Fiji
  • Idioctis intertidalis (Benoit & Legendre, 1968) – Madagascar, Seychelles, Mayotte
  • Idioctis littoralis Abraham, 1924 – Singapore
  • Idioctis marovo Churchill & Raven, 1992 – Solomon Is.
  • Idioctis talofa Churchill & Raven, 1992 – Samoa
  • Idioctis xmas Raven, 1988 – Australia (Christmas Is.)
  • Idioctis yerlata Churchill & Raven, 1992 – Australia (Queensland)
gollark: According to the widely shared arbitrary estimate of Dunbar's number you can have something like 150 close social connections. This is probably at least order-of-magnitude accurate.
gollark: I'm saying that I don't think you can operate them off altruism/social connections because they involve too much scale.
gollark: If you want nice 5nm CPUs you're going to need giant fabs and the companies supplying tooling to them and whoever supplies exotic chemicals to them and whatever.
gollark: The last thing? We rely on things like semiconductors and complex medical whatever with ridiculously complex global supply chains which require things across the planet.
gollark: However, current technology requires us to operate economic systems at a global scale.

References

  1. "Gen. Idioctis L. Koch, 1874". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-05-16.
  2. Raven, R. J. (1985). "The spider infraorder Mygalomorphae (Araneae): Cladistics and systematics". Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. 182: 113.
  3. Koch, L. (1874). Die Arachniden Australiens.


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