Pristidia

Pristidia is a genus of Asian sac spiders first described by Christa L. Deeleman-Reinhold in 2001.[2]

Pristidia
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Clubionidae
Genus: Pristidia
Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001[1]
Type species
P. prima
Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001
Species

6, see text

Species

As of April 2019 it contains six species:[1]

  • Pristidia cervicornuta Yu, Zhang & Chen, 2017 – China
  • Pristidia longistila Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001 – Borneo
  • Pristidia prima Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001 (type) – Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia (Sumatra, Java)
  • Pristidia ramosa Yu, Sun & Zhang, 2012 – China, Taiwan
  • Pristidia secunda Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001 – Indonesia (Sumatra)
  • Pristidia viridissima Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001 – Thailand to Indonesia (Borneo)
gollark: They also sealed it to cover up the flatness of the Earth.
gollark: They have to stop people escaping via digging downward through the Earth too.
gollark: Or would it be a crystal *cylinder* for a flat earth?
gollark: "Clearly I've hit the crystal sphere surrounding the Earth and my rocket broke."
gollark: Inherited vaccines, that is.

References

  1. "Gen. Pristidia Deeleman-Reinhold, 2001". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-05-18.
  2. Deeleman-Reinhold, C. L. (2001). Forest spiders of South East Asia: with a revision of the sac and ground spiders (Araneae: Clubionidae, Corinnidae, Liocranidae, Gnaphosidae, Prodidomidae and Trochanterriidae [sic]).


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