Xestaspis

Xestaspis is a genus of goblin spiders that was first described by Eugène Louis Simon in 1884.[2]

Xestaspis
X. shoushanensis, female
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Oonopidae
Genus: Xestaspis
Simon, 1884[1]
Type species
X. loricata
(L. Koch, 1873)
Species

18, see text

Species

X. shoushanensis
female
male

As of June 2019 it contains eighteen species, found in Asia, Africa, Oceania, Yemen, and Sri Lanka:[1]

  • Xestaspis biflocci Eichenberger, 2012 – Thailand
  • Xestaspis kandy Eichenberger, 2012 – Sri Lanka
  • Xestaspis linnaei Ott & Harvey, 2008 – Australia (Western Australia)
  • Xestaspis loricata (L. Koch, 1873) (type) – China, Taiwan, Laos, Australia, Micronesia, French Polynesia
  • Xestaspis nitida Simon, 1884 – Algeria, Yemen
  • Xestaspis nuwaraeliya Ranasinghe & Benjamin, 2016 – Sri Lanka
  • Xestaspis padaviya Ranasinghe & Benjamin, 2016 – Sri Lanka
  • Xestaspis paulina Eichenberger, 2012 – Sri Lanka
  • Xestaspis pophami Ranasinghe & Benjamin, 2016 – Sri Lanka
  • Xestaspis recurva Strand, 1906 – Ethiopia
  • Xestaspis rostrata Tong & Li, 2009 – China
  • Xestaspis semengoh Eichenberger, 2012 – Borneo
  • Xestaspis sertata Simon, 1907 – Equatorial Guinea (Bioko)
  • Xestaspis shoushanensis Tong & Li, 2014 – Taiwan
  • Xestaspis sis Saaristo & van Harten, 2006 – Yemen
  • Xestaspis sublaevis Simon, 1893 – Sri Lanka
  • Xestaspis tumidula Simon, 1893 – Sierra Leone
  • Xestaspis yemeni Saaristo & van Harten, 2006 – Yemen
gollark: This is the problem - with ones which are too long they can't be really tested.
gollark: In decently general-purpose programming languages with access to more space, you can construct ridiculously large numbers by implementing ↑ and all that.
gollark: Not without extra imports or something. or maybe python2.
gollark: Probably.
gollark: 'Twould be very slow, though, given that it would need to *execute* the programs to test them, and it would probably miss a few since it would need maybe a 10-second cutoff.

See also

References

  1. "Gen. Xestaspis Simon, 1884". World Spider Catalog Version 20.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2019. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 2019-07-03.
  2. Simon, E. (1884). "Arachnides nouveaux d'Algérie". Bulletin de la Société Zoologique de France. 9: 321–327.


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