Petrichus
Petrichus is a genus of South American running crab spiders that was first described by Eugène Louis Simon in 1886.[2]
Petrichus | |
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Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Philodromidae |
Genus: | Petrichus Simon, 1886[1] |
Type species | |
P. marmoratus Simon, 1886 | |
Species | |
16, see text |
Species
As of June 2019 it contains sixteen species, found in Brazil, Argentina, Ecuador, Chile, and on the Falkland Islands:[1]
- Petrichus cinereus Tullgren, 1901 – Argentina
- Petrichus corticinus Mello-Leitão, 1944 – Argentina
- Petrichus fuliginosus (Nicolet, 1849) – Chile
- Petrichus funebris (Nicolet, 1849) – Chile
- Petrichus griseus Berland, 1913 – Ecuador
- Petrichus junior (Nicolet, 1849) – Chile
- Petrichus lancearius Simon, 1905 – Argentina
- Petrichus luteus (Nicolet, 1849) – Chile
- Petrichus marmoratus Simon, 1886 (type) – Argentina
- Petrichus meridionalis (Keyserling, 1891) – Brazil
- Petrichus niveus (Simon, 1895) – Argentina, Falkland Is.
- Petrichus ornatus Schiapelli & Gerschman, 1942 – Argentina
- Petrichus sordidus Tullgren, 1901 – Argentina
- Petrichus tobioides Mello-Leitão, 1941 – Argentina
- Petrichus tullgreni Simon, 1902 – Argentina
- Petrichus zonatus Tullgren, 1901 – Argentina
gollark: > "surveillance" also happens when one researches documents available to general public.Yes, it does, and your rather passive-aggressive claim about how "there would be no need for NSA to exist" doesn't invalidate this. You can spy on people using information which is available for regular people to access with some work.
gollark: Because you might be an alt.
gollark: Yes, nobody was banned.
gollark: It's hard to have "proof" on things which are basically just... convoluted ethical/semantic arguments.
gollark: Doing probably rule-violatey or against some ethical standards things, I think he *has* done that.
See also
References
- "Gen. Petrichus Simon, 1886". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-07-04.
- Simon, E. (1886). "Arachnides recueillis en 1882-1883 dans la Patagonie méridionale, de Santa Cruz à Punta Arena, par M. E. Lebrun, attaché comme naturaliste à la Mission du passage de Vénus". Bulletin de la Société Zoologique de France. 11: 558–577.
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