Sandokanidae

Sandokanidae is a family of harvestmen in the suborder Laniatores, formerly referred to as Oncopodidae (the name was replaced because of the secondary homonymy of the type genus Oncopus, replaced by Sandokan; this made the change of family name mandatory) [1]

Sandokanidae
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
Order:
Suborder:
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Family:
Sandokanidae

Özdikmen & Kury, 2007
Species

See text for list.

Diversity
5 genera, > 60 species

Name

The name of the type genus is based on the name of a fictional Bornean prince-pirate.[1]

Description

Sandokanidae range in body size from about 2–11 mm. Their legs are relatively short and stout. Most species are amber colored with some dark brown patterns. A few undescribed Gnomulus species are orange.[2]

Distribution

This family is known from Southeast Asia from Indonesia, almost reaching New Guinea on Waigeo, up north into the Himalayan region.[2]

Relationships

Sandokanidae are probably the sister group to all other Grassatores.[2]

Species

  • Biantoncopus Martens & Schwendinger, 1998
  • Caenoncopus Martens & Schwendinger, 1998Sumatra
  • Caenoncopus affinis Martens & Schwendinger, 1998
  • Caenoncopus cuspidatus (Schwendinger, 1992)
  • Caenoncopus tenuis Martens & Schwendinger, 1998
  • Gnomulus Thorell, 1890
  • Gnomulus aborensis (Roewer, 1913)Arunachal Pradesh (northeast India)
  • Gnomulus annulipes (Pocock, 1897)Sarawak (Borneo)
  • Gnomulus armillatus (Thorell, 1891) — Sumatra
  • Gnomulus asli Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — West Malaysia
  • Gnomulus baharu Schwendinger, in Martens & Schwendinger 1998
  • Gnomulus carinatus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002Kalimantan (Indonesia)
  • Gnomulus claviger Schwendinger & Martens, 2002Luzon (Philippines)
  • Gnomulus coniceps Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — Luzon
  • Gnomulus conigerus (Schwendinger, 1992)Sabah (Malaysia)
  • Gnomulus crassipes Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Luzon
  • Gnomulus crucifer Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — Luzon
  • Gnomulus drescoi (Silhavy, 1962) — Sumatra
  • Gnomulus exsudans Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Sabah
  • Gnomulus goodnighti (Suzuki, 1977)Mindanao (Philippines)
  • Gnomulus hamatus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Luzon
  • Gnomulus hirsutus Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — West Malaysia
  • Gnomulus hutan Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Sarawak
  • Gnomulus hyatti (Martens, 1977)Nepal
  • Gnomulus imadatei (Suzuki, 1970)Brunei
  • Gnomulus insularis (Roewer, 1927)Penang? (Malaysia)
  • Gnomulus javanicus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002Java
  • Gnomulus laevis (Roewer, 1915)Borneo
  • Gnomulus lannaianus (Schwendinger, 1992)Thailand
  • Gnomulus laruticus Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — West Malaysia
  • Gnomulus latoperculum Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Sulawesi
  • Gnomulus leofeae Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Burma
  • Gnomulus leyteensis Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — Leyte
  • Gnomulus lomani Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Borneo, Sumatra?
  • Gnomulus maculatus Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — Luzon
  • Gnomulus marginatus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Thailand
  • Gnomulus matabesar Schwendinger & Martens, 2002Halmahera (Indonesia)
  • Gnomulus minor N. Tsurusaki, 1990Philippines
  • Gnomulus monticola Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — West Malaysia
  • Gnomulus obscurus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Sarawak
  • Gnomulus palawanensis (S. Suzuki, 1982)Palawan (Philippines)
  • Gnomulus piliger (Pocock, 1903) — Thailand
  • Gnomulus pilosus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — West Malaysia
  • Gnomulus pulvillatus (Pocock, 1903) — West Malaysia
  • Gnomulus rostratoideus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — West Malaysia, Singapore
  • Gnomulus rostratus Thorell, 1890 — Penang
  • Gnomulus ryssie Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Thailand
  • Gnomulus sinensis Schwendinger & Martens, 2002Sichuan (China)
  • Gnomulus spiniceps Schwendinger & Martens, 2002Vietnam
  • Gnomulus sumatranus Thorell, 1891 — Sumatra
  • Gnomulus sundaicus (Schwendinger, 1992) — Sarawak
  • Gnomulus thorelli (Sørensen, 1932) — Java
  • Gnomulus tuberculatus Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Sumatra
  • Gnomulus tumidifrons Schwendinger & Martens, 2002 — Halmahera
  • Sandokan Özdikmen & Kury, 2007 [1]
  • Sandokan doriae Thorell, 1876 — Sarawak
  • Sandokan expatriatus (Schwendinger & Martens, 2004) — Thailand?
  • Sandokan feae Thorell, 1890 — Penang
  • Sandokan hosei Pocock, 1897 — Sarawak
  • Sandokan lingga (Schwendinger & Martens, 2004) — Lingga Islands (Indonesia)
  • Sandokan malayanus (Schwendinger & Martens, 2004) — West Malaysia
  • Sandokan megachelis (Schwendinger, 1992) — Sabah
  • Sandokan tiomanensis (Schwendinger & Martens, 2004)Tioman Island (Malaysia)
  • Sandokan truncatus Thorell, 1891 — Singapore
  • Palaeoncopus Martens & Schwendinger, 1998 — Sumatra
  • Palaeoncopus gunung Martens & Schwendinger, 1998
  • Palaeoncopus katik Martens & Schwendinger, 1998
  • Palaeoncopus kerdil Martens & Schwendinger, 1998
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gollark: Websockets are bidirectional communication, which is waaaay better for this.
gollark: Also, did you consider websockets instead of some weird HTTP polling?
gollark: <@426660245738356738> Can you share the code for the HTTP server this presumably connects to?
gollark: Still, I think that trying to use CC without programming anything... kind of defeats the point of using CC.

References

  1. Özdikmen, Hüseyin; Kury, Adriano Brilhante. "REPLACEMENT NAMES FOR ONCOPUS AND ONCOPODIDAE (ARACHNIDA, OPILIONES)". Journal of Arachnology. 35 (2): 407–408. doi:10.1636/h05-46.1.
  2. Schwendinger, Peter (2007): Oncopodidae. Kury & Pérez G., 2002. In: Pinto-da-Rocha et al. 2007: 211ff
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