Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
List of Deinopidae species
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
This page lists all described species of the spider family Deinopidae accepted by the World Spider Catalog as of December 2020[update]:[1]
Asianopis
Asianopis Lin & Li, 2020
- A. aruensis (Roewer, 1938) — Indonesia (Aru Is.)
- A. celebensis (Merian, 1911) — Indonesia (Sulawesi)
- A. dumogae (Merian, 1911) — Indonesia (Sulawesi)
- A. goalparaensis (Tikader & Malhotra, 1978) — India
- A. konplong (Logunov, 2018) — Vietnam
- A. liukuensis (Yin, Griswold & Yan, 2002) — India, China
- A. wangi Lin & Li, 2020 — China (Hainan)
- A. wuchaoi Lin & Li, 2020 — China
- A. zhuanghaoyuni Lin & Li, 2020 (type) — China
Remove ads
† Deinopedes
† Deinopedes Wunderlich, 2017[2] — Cretaceous Burmese amber
- † D. tranquillus Wunderlich, 2017
Deinopis
Summarize
Perspective
Deinopis MacLeay, 1839
- D. amica Schiapelli & Gerschman, 1957 — Argentina, Uruguay
- D. anchietae Brito Capello, 1867 — West Africa, Angola, South Africa
- D. armaticeps Mello-Leitão, 1925 — Brazil
- D. aspectans Pocock, 1900 — Cameroon, Equatorial Guinea, DR Congo, South Africa
- D. aurita F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1902 — Mexico
- D. biaculeata Simon, 1906 — Brazil
- D. bituberculata Franganillo, 1930 — Cuba
- D. bucculenta Schenkel, 1953 — Venezuela
- D. camela Thorell, 1881 — New Guinea
- D. cornigera Gerstaecker, 1873 — Ethiopia, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania, South Africa
- D. cylindracea C. L. Koch, 1846 — Colombia
- D. cylindrica Pocock, 1898 — Mozambique, South Africa
- D. diabolica Kraus, 1956 — El Salvador
- D. fasciata L. Koch, 1879 — Australia (Queensland)
- D. fasciculigera Simon, 1909 — Vietnam
- D. fastigata Simon, 1906 — Brazil
- D. giltayi Lessert, 1930 — Congo
- D. granadensis Keyserling, 1879 — Colombia
- D. guasca Mello-Leitão, 1943 — Brazil
- D. guianensis Taczanowski, 1874 — French Guiana
- D. guineensis Berland & Millot, 1940 — Guinea
- D. kollari Doleschall, 1859 — Myanmar, Indonesia (Ambon)
- D. labangan Barrion-Dupo & Barrion, 2018 — Philippines
- D. lamia MacLeay, 1839 (type) — Cuba, Puerto Rico
- D. longipalpula Strand, 1913 — Central Africa
- D. longipes F. O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1902 — Mexico to Panama
- D. luzonensis Barrion-Dupo & Barrion, 2018 — Philippines
- D. madagascariensis Lenz, 1886 — Madagascar
- D. mediocris Kulczyński, 1908 — New Guinea
- D. ornata Pocock, 1902 — Ethiopia
- D. pallida Mello-Leitão, 1939 — Brazil
- D. pardalis Simon, 1906 — Brazil
- D. plurituberculata Mello-Leitão, 1925 — Brazil
- D. ravida L. Koch, 1878 — Australia (Queensland)
- D. reticulata (Rainbow, 1899) — New Guinea
- D. rodophthalma Mello-Leitão, 1939 — Brazil
- D. schomburgki Karsch, 1878 — Australia (South Australia)
- D. schoutedeni Giltay, 1929 — Congo
- D. seriata Simon, 1906 — Brazil
- D. spinosa Marx, 1889 — USA, St. Vincent, Venezuela
- D. subrufa L. Koch, 1878 — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales, Tasmania), New Zealand
- D. tabida L. Koch, 1879 — Australia (Queensland)
- D. tuboculata Franganillo, 1926 — Cuba
- D. unicolor L. Koch, 1878 — Australia (Western Australia)
Remove ads
Menneus
Menneus
Menneus Simon, 1876
- M. aussie Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales), New Caledonia
- M. bituberculatus Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Queensland), possibly New Guinea
- M. camelus Pocock, 1902 — South Africa
- M. capensis (Purcell, 1904) — South Africa
- M. darwini Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Tanzania
- M. dromedarius Purcell, 1904 — South Africa, Madagascar
- M. nemesio Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (New South Wales)
- M. neocaledonicus (Simon, 1888) — New Caledonia
- M. quasimodo Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Western Australia)
- M. samperi Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — East Africa
- M. superciliosus (Thorell, 1881) — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales)
- M. tetragnathoides Simon, 1876 (type) — Angola, Malawi, Tanzania
- M. trinodosus Rainbow, 1920 — Australia (Queensland, New South Wales, Lord Howe Is.)
- M. wa Coddington, Kuntner & Opell, 2012 — Australia (Western Australia)
- † M. pietrzeniukae Wunderlich, 2004
Remove ads
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads