Liocranoides
Liocranoides is a genus of American false wolf spiders that was first described by Eugen von Keyserling in 1881.[2] They live in habitats with cold surfaces, such as caves.[3] It was transferred from the sac spiders to the Tengellidae in 1967,[4] which was later merged with Zoropsidae.[5]
Liocranoides | |
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Scientific classification ![]() | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Zoropsidae |
Genus: | Liocranoides Keyserling, 1881[1] |
Type species | |
L. unicolor Keyserling, 1881 | |
Species | |
5, see text |
Species
As of September 2019 it contains five species, found Alabama, Georgia, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia:[3][1]
- Liocranoides archeri Platnick, 1999 – USA
- Liocranoides coylei Platnick, 1999 – USA
- Liocranoides gertschi Platnick, 1999 – USA
- Liocranoides tennesseensis Platnick, 1999 – USA
- Liocranoides unicolor Keyserling, 1881 (type) – USA
gollark: Interestingly, you can run your own applications on it with some work (I made a RSS reader) and its browser appears to be kind of broken in a variety of ways and not enforce CORS.
gollark: My Kindle (the e-ink kind, not the android tablets) actually runs Linux using X, the "awesome" window manager, and some sort of vaguely horrible GUI which seems to be made with HTML/CSS/JS.
gollark: There's probably some window manager thing for single-purpose systems.
gollark: That is a bizarrely long function, though.
gollark: You should make sure it doesn't rebel against humanity or something.
See also
References
- "Gen. Liocranoides Keyserling, 1881". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-10-15.
- Keyserling, E. (1881). "Neue Spinnen aus Amerika. III". Verhandlungen der Kaiserlich-Königlichen Zoologisch-Botanischen Gesellschaft in Wien. 31: 269–314.
- "Genus Liocranoides". BugGuide. Retrieved 2019-10-15.
- Lehtinen, P. T. (1967). "Classification of the cribellate spiders and some allied families, with notes on the evolution of the suborder Araneomorpha". Annales Zoologici Fennici. 4: 244.
- Polotow, Daniele; Carmichael, Anthea & Griswold, Charles E. (2015). "Total evidence analysis of the phylogenetic relationships of Lycosoidea spiders (Araneae, Entelegynae)". Invertebrate Systematics. 29 (2): 124–163. doi:10.1071/IS14041.
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