Storena

Storena is a genus of ant spiders first described by Charles Athanase Walckenaer in 1805.[2]

Storena
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Zodariidae
Genus: Storena
Walckenaer, 1805[1]
Type species
S. cyanea Walckenaer, 1805
Species

61, see text

Species

As of April 2019 it contains sixty-one species:[1]

  • S. analis Simon, 1893 — Ecuador
  • S. annulipes (L. Koch, 1867) — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. arakuensis Patel & Reddy, 1989 — India
  • S. aspinosa Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (South Australia)
  • S. birenifer Gravely, 1921 — India
  • S. botenella Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (South Australia)
  • S. braccata (L. Koch, 1865) — Australia (New South Wales)
  • S. canalensis Berland, 1924 — New Caledonia
  • S. caporiaccoi Brignoli, 1983 — Venezuela
  • S. charlotte Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland, Victoria)
  • S. cochleare Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (New South Wales)
  • S. colossea Rainbow, 1920 — Australia (Lord Howe Is.)
  • S. cyanea Walckenaer, 1805 — Eastern Australia
  • S. daviesae Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. debasrae Biswas & Biswas, 1992 — India
  • S. deserticola Jocqué, 1991 — Australia (Northern Territory)
  • S. dibangensis Biswas & Biswas, 2006 — India
  • S. digitulus Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. eximia Simon, 1908 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • S. flavipes (Urquhart, 1893) — Australia (Tasmania)
  • S. flavopicta (Simon, 1876) — Indonesia (Moluccas)
  • S. flexuosa (Thorell, 1895) — Myanmar
  • S. formosa Thorell, 1870 — Australia (mainland, Lord Howe Is.)
  • S. fungina Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • S. graeffei (L. Koch, 1866) — Australia (New South Wales)
  • S. harveyi Jocqué & Baehr, 1995 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • S. ignava Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Northern Territory)
  • S. indica Tikader & Patel, 1975 — India
  • S. inornata Rainbow, 1916 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. kraepelini Simon, 1905 — Indonesia (Java)
  • S. lebruni Simon, 1886 — Argentina
  • S. lesserti Berland, 1938 — Vanuatu
  • S. longiducta Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. maculata O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1869 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. mainae Jocqué & Baehr, 1995 — Australia (New South Wales, Victoria)
  • S. martini Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Northern Territory)
  • S. mathematica Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Northern Territory)
  • S. metallica Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. nana Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Victoria)
  • S. nuga Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. ornata (Bradley, 1877) — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. parvicavum Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. parvula Berland, 1938 — Vanuatu
  • S. paucipunctata Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • S. procedens Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. rainbowi Berland, 1924 — New Caledonia
  • S. rastellata Strand, 1913 — Central Australia
  • S. raveni Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. recta Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Western Australia, Queensland, New South Wales)
  • S. recurvata Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria)
  • S. rotunda Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (New South Wales)
  • S. rufescens Thorell, 1881 — New Guinea, Australia (Queensland)
  • S. rugosa Simon, 1889 — New Caledonia
  • S. scita Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Queensland)
  • S. silvicola Berland, 1924 — New Caledonia
  • S. sinuosa Jocqué & Baehr, 1992 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • S. tenera (Thorell, 1895) — Myanmar
  • S. tikaderi Patel & Reddy, 1989 — India
  • S. tricolor Simon, 1908 — Australia (Western Australia)
  • S. variegata O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1869 — Australia (Western Australia, South Australia)
  • S. zavattarii Caporiacco, 1941 — Ethiopia
gollark: The trick to avoiding the pain is to never hunt again!
gollark: I feel a strange sense of pride. I managed to make someone with a "normal" naming scheme (i.e. vaguely pronounceable syllables with no visible meaning) call a dragon `Peppered Sausage II` just by breeding `Avocado Sausages` to the AP ages ago.
gollark: It's not as if all names are actually what we'd call humans.
gollark: It did break lots, sure, but unless TJ09 manages to have gone against all sanity advice regarding database use, `-` at the start should not be a problem.
gollark: If it did, TJ09 has done it utterly, *utterly* wrong.

References

  1. "Gen. Storena Walckenaer, 1805". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 2019-04-14.
  2. Walckenaer, C. A. (1805). Tableau des aranéides ou caractères essentiels des tribus, genres, familles et races que renferme le genre Aranea de Linné, avec la désignation des espèces comprises dans chacune de ces divisions.


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