Monaeses

Monaeses is a genus of crab spiders in the family Thomisidae, containing twenty seven species.[1]

Monaeses
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Family:
Genus:
Monaeses

Thorell, 1869
Type species
Monaeses paradoxus
(Lucas, 1846)
Species

See text

Diversity
27 species

Species

  • Monaeses aciculus (Simon, 1903) — Nepal to Japan, Philippines
  • Monaeses attenuatus O. P.-Cambridge, 1899 — Sri Lanka
  • Monaeses austrinus Simon, 1910 — West, Southern Africa
  • Monaeses brevicaudatus L. Koch, 1874 — Queensland
  • Monaeses caudatus Tang & Song, 1988 — China
  • Monaeses cinerascens (Thorell, 1887) — Sri Lanka, Myanmar
  • Monaeses fasciculiger Jezequel, 1964 — Ivory Coast
  • Monaeses fuscus Dippenaar-Schoeman, 1984 — South Africa
  • Monaeses gibbus Dippenaar-Schoeman, 1984 — South Africa
  • Monaeses greeni O. P.-Cambridge, 1899 — Sri Lanka
  • Monaeses griseus Pavesi, 1897 — Ethiopia to South Africa
  • Monaeses guineensis Millot, 1942 — Guinea
  • Monaeses habamatinikus Barrion & Litsinger, 1995 — Philippines
  • Monaeses israeliensis Levy, 1973 — Greece, Turkey, Israel, Lebanon, Central Asia
  • Monaeses jabalpurensis Gajbe & Rane, 1992 — India
  • Monaeses lucasi (Taczanowski, 1872) — Guyana
  • Monaeses mukundi Tikader, 1980 — India
  • Monaeses nigritus Simon, 1909 — Vietnam
  • Monaeses pachpediensis (Tikader, 1980) — India
  • Monaeses paradoxus (Lucas, 1846) — Europe to Azerbaijan, Africa
  • Monaeses parvati Tikader, 1963 — India
  • Monaeses pustulosus Pavesi, 1895 — Ethiopia to South Africa
  • Monaeses quadrituberculatus Lawrence, 1927 — Southern Africa
  • Monaeses reticulatus (Simon, 1909) — Vietnam
  • Monaeses tuberculatus (Thorell, 1895) — Myanmar
  • Monaeses xiphosurus Simon, 1907 — Guinea-Bissau
  • Monaeses xyphoides L. Koch, 1874 — Queensland
gollark: Not *exactly*. There is a nonzero chance that you somehow completely failed to notice that it had an 8 on it and it lands on that, or that the dice is somehow swapped out for one with 8s on it as you roll it, or that sort of thing.
gollark: But I want them to implement self replicating spreadsheet cells to run some weird cellular automaton to run a Turing machine to parse HTML.
gollark: I don't know if it has HTTP capability, but it could totally sort of do HTML/CSS if it is.
gollark: Excel is Turing-complete isn't it?
gollark: I don't think people do much of the time, though.

References

  1. "Gen. Monaeses Thorell, 1869". World Spider Catalog. Retrieved 23 May 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.