Trilacuna

Trilacuna is a genus of goblin spiders native to Southeast Asia, first described by Tong & Li in 2007.[2] They look similar to members of Silhouettella, but males can be distinguished by their large palpal femur, among several other more complicated defining features. The name is a combination of the Latin terms "tri" and "lacuna", referring to the three-branched endites in males and the three-notched labium in females.[2]

Trilacuna
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Infraorder: Araneomorphae
Family: Oonopidae
Genus: Trilacuna
Tong & Li, 2007[1]
Species

See text

Species

As of February 2019, it contains 29 species.[1]

  • Trilacuna aenobarba (Brignoli, 1978) — Bhutan
  • Trilacuna alces Eichenberger, 2011 — Thailand
  • Trilacuna angularis Tong & Li, 2007 — China
  • Trilacuna bangla Grismado & Ramírez, 2014 — India, Nepal
  • Trilacuna bawan Tong, Zhang & Li, 2019 — China
  • Trilacuna besucheti Grismado & Piacentini, 2014 — China
  • Trilacuna bilingua Eichenberger, 2011 — Malaysia
  • Trilacuna clarissa Eichenberger, 2011 — Suamtra
  • Trilacuna datang Tong, Zhang & Li, 2019 — China
  • Trilacuna diabolica Kranz-Baltensperger, 2011 — Thailand
  • Trilacuna fugong Tong, Zhang & Li, 2019 — China
  • Trilacuna gongshan Tong, Zhang & Li, 2019 — China
  • Trilacuna hamata Tong & Li, 2013 — Vietnam
  • Trilacuna hansanensis Seo, 2017 — Korea
  • Trilacuna hazaraGrismado & Ramírez, 2014 — Pakistan
  • Trilacuna kropfi Eichenberger, 2011 — Thailand
  • Trilacuna loebli Grismado & Piacentini, 2014 — India
  • Trilacuna longling Tong, Zhang & Li, 2019 — China
  • Trilacuna mahanadi Grismado & Piacentini, 2014 — India
  • Trilacuna meghalaya Grismado & Piacentini, 2014 — India
  • Trilacuna merapi Kranz-Baltensperger & Eichenberger, 2011 — Sumatra
  • Trilacuna qarzi Malek Hosseini & Grismado, 2015 — Iran
  • Trilacuna rastrum Tong & Li, 2007 — China
  • Trilacuna simianshan Tong & Li, 2018 — China
  • Trilacuna sinuosa Tong & Li, 2013 — Vietnam
  • Trilacuna songyuae Tong & Li, 2018 — China
  • Trilacuna werni Eichenberger, 2011 — Thailand
  • Trilacuna wuhe Tong, Zhang & Li, 2019 — China
  • Trilacuna xinping Tong, Zhang & Li, 2019 — China

See also

  • Spiders of Asia
  • Fauna of Southeast Asia

References

  1. "Oonopidae". World Spider Catalog. Natural History Museum Bern. Retrieved 2019-03-03.
  2. Tong, Y. F.; Li, S. Q. (2007). "One new genus and four new species of oonopid spiders from southwest China (Araneae: Oonopidae)". Annales Zoologici, Warszawa. 57: 331–340.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.