Panonychus

Panonychus is a genus of spider mites in the family Tetranychidae. There are about 16 described species in Panonychus.[1][2][3][4]

Panonychus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Subclass: Acari
Order: Trombidiformes
Family: Tetranychidae
Subfamily: Tetranychinae
Genus: Panonychus
Yokoyama, 1929

Species

These 16 species belong to the genus Panonychus:

  • Panonychus akitanus Ehara, 1978 c g
  • Panonychus bambusicola Ehara & Gotoh, 1991 c g
  • Panonychus caglei Mellot, 1968 c g
  • Panonychus caricae Hatzinikolis, 1984 c g
  • Panonychus citri (McGregor, 1916) c g
  • Panonychus elongatus Manson, 1963 c g
  • Panonychus globosus Tseng, 1974 c g
  • Panonychus hadzhibejliae (Reck, 1947) c g
  • Panonychus inca Vis & Moraes, 2002 c g
  • Panonychus lishanensis Tseng, 1990 c g
  • Panonychus mori Yokoyama, 1929 c g
  • Panonychus osmanthi Ehara & Gotoh, 1996 c g
  • Panonychus pusillus (Ehara & Gotoh, 1987) c g
  • Panonychus spinigerus (Lucas, 1849) c g
  • Panonychus thelytokus Ehara & Gotoh, 1992 c g
  • Panonychus ulmi (Koch, 1836) c g b (European red mite)

Data sources: i = ITIS,[5] c = Catalogue of Life,[1] g = GBIF,[2] b = Bugguide.net[3]

gollark: .
gollark: Is performance a significant issue in shells? I doubt I'd notice as long as it does reasonable stuff in less than 20ms or so
gollark: Pay your landlord in ice cream?
gollark: fish is pretty great, it has excellent line editing and history search.
gollark: I used to have zsh on my servers, but I realized it was actually not better for me in any way.

References

  1. "Browse Panonychus". Catalogue of Life. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  2. "Panonychus". GBIF. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  3. "Panonychus Genus Information". BugGuide.net. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  4. "Panonychus Overview". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 2018-04-06.
  5. "ITIS, Integrated Taxonomic Information System". Retrieved 2018-04-06.

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.
  • Halliday, R.B.; O’connor, O’B.M.; Baker, A.S. (2000). Raven, P.H. (ed.). "Global diversity of mites". Nature and Human Society—the Quest for a Sustainable World. National Academy Press: 192–203. doi:10.17226/6142.
  • Jackman, John A. (2002). A Field Guide to Spiders and Scorpions of Texas. Gulf Publishing. ISBN 978-0877192640.
  • Krantz, G.W.; Walter, D.E., eds. (2009). A Manual of Acarology (3rd ed.). Texas Tech University Press. ISBN 9780896726208.
  • Skoracki, M.; Zabludovskaya, S.; Bochkov, A.V. (2012). "A review of Prostigmata (Acariformes: Trombidiformes) permanently associated with birds" (PDF). Acarina. 20 (2): 67–107.
  • Zhang, Z.Q.; Fan, Q.H.; Pesic, V.; Smit, H.; et al. (2011). "Animal biodiversity: an outline of higher-level classification and survey of taxonomic richness, order trombidiformes reuter, 1909". Zootaxa. 3148: 129–138.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.