Synothele

Synothele is a genus of Australian brushed trapdoor spiders first described by Eugène Simon in 1908.[2] The number of species in the genera was greatly expanded by Robert Raven in 1994.[3]

Synothele
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Mygalomorphae
Family: Barychelidae
Genus: Synothele
Simon, 1908[1]
Type species
S. michaelseni
Simon, 1908
Species

24, see text

Species

As of April 2019 it contains twenty-four species:[1]

  • Synothele arrakis Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele boongaree Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele butleri Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele durokoppin Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele goongarrie Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele harveyi Churchill & Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele houstoni Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele howi Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele karara Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele koonalda Raven, 1994 – Australia (South Australia)
  • Synothele longbottomi Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele lowei Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele meadhunteri Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia, South Australia)
  • Synothele michaelseni Simon, 1908 (type) – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele moonabie Raven, 1994 – Australia (South Australia)
  • Synothele mullaloo Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele ooldea Raven, 1994 – Australia (South Australia)
  • Synothele parifusca (Main, 1954) – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele pectinata Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele rastelloides Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele rubripes Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele subquadrata Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele taurus Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Synothele yundamindra Raven, 1994 – Australia (Western Australia)
gollark: I also wrote a chat program in about 30 lines of easily memorable python which uses that convenient IPv4 broadcast address, because I wanted a version of my multicast chat thing which was less ridiculously fragile. So you could also plausibly cheat using that.
gollark: You could actually just use the HTTP thing to download code off pastebin too I guess.
gollark: No, you don't have access to your usual network drive.
gollark: So in theory (I said this to them, and apparently I wouldn't have enough time to cheat so it didn't matter, which would have been wrong as I in fact had lots of spare time) you could access the internet by manually sending HTTP requests from python and parsing the HTML, yes.
gollark: They "block internet access" by stopping the browsers opening. However, we can access python for obvious reasons, and python has built-in HTTP libraries.

References

  1. "Gen. Synothele Simon, 1908". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-05-17.
  2. Simon, E. (1908), "Araneae. 1re partie", in Michaelsen, Hartmeyer (ed.), Die Fauna Südwest-Australiens
  3. Raven, R. J. (1994). "Mygalomorph spiders of the Barychelidae in Australia and the western Pacific". Memoirs of the Queensland Museum. 35: 291–706.

Data related to Synothele at Wikispecies


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