Hubbardiidae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Hubbardiidae
Temporal range: Cenomanian–Present
Hubbardia pentapeltis male 1.jpg
Male Hubbardia pentapeltis
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Class: Arachnida
Order: Schizomida
Family: Hubbardiidae
Cook, 1899
Subfamilies

Cook, 1899
Megaschizominae Rowland, 1973

Hubbardiidae is a family of arachnids, superficially resembling spiders. It is the larger of the two extant families of the order, Schizomida, and is divided into two subfamilies. The family is based on the description published by Orator F. Cook in 1899, and was previously named as Schizomidae.[1] The American Arachnological Society assigns the common name hubbardiid shorttailed whipscorpion to members of this family[2]

The classification of the family includes 51 genera. Seven of these genera are found in Australia (of which five are endemic): Draculoides, , , and .[1] Five genera are found in Mexico, three of which are endemic (Pacal, and ).[3]

Classification[]

The following is a list of genera, divided into two subfamilies:[4]

  • Hubbardiidae Cook, 1899[5]
    • Cook, 1899
      • Cokendolpher & Reddell, 2000[6]
      • Afrozomus Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Anepsiozomus Harvey, 2001
      • Armas and Teruel, 2002
      • Apozomus Harvey, 1992
      • Cook, 1899
      • Harvey, 2000
      • Harvey, 1992
      • Harvey, 2000
      • Bastawade, 2004
      • Armas & Rehfeldt, 2015
      • Moreno-González & Villarreal, 2012
      • Pinto-da-Rocha, Andrade & Moreno-González, 2016
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Armas, 2002
      • Armas & Delgado-Santa, 2012
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Draculoides Harvey, 1992
      • Harvey, 2006
      • Teruel and Armas, 2002
      • Kulkarni, 2012
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Hubbardia Cook, 1899
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Harvey, 1992
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Harvey, 2001
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Pinto-da-Rocha, Andrade & Moreno-González, 2016
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Harvey, 1992
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Cokendolpher and Tsurusaki, 1994
      • Harvey, 2001
      • Pacal Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Villarreal, Giupponi and Tourinho, 2008
      • Armas, 2002
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Cook, 1899
      • Harvey, 2001
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1991
      • Stenochrus Chamberlin, 1922
      • González-Sponga, 1997
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Kraepelin, 1899
      • Teruel, 2003
      • Armas and Colmenares, 2006
      • Reddell and Cokendolpher, 1995
      • Müller et al, 2020 (Burmese amber, Cenomanian)[7]
    • Megaschizominae Rowland, 1973

Notes[]

  1. ^ a b Australian Faunal Directory (Harvey 2002)
  2. ^ American Arachnological Society 2003:42
  3. ^ Montaño Moreno & Francke 2009:33; Harvey 2003:112–123
  4. ^ "Hubbardiidae". Integrated Taxonomic Information System.
  5. ^ Cook 1899
  6. ^ Cokendolpher, J.C.; Reddell, J.R. 2000: New and rare Schizomida (Arachnida: Hubbardiidae) from South America. Amazoniana, 16(1-2): 187-212. PDF
  7. ^ Müller, Sandro P.; Dunlop, Jason A.; Kotthoff, Ulrich; Hammel, Jörg U.; Harms, Danilo (February 2020). "The oldest short-tailed whipscorpion (Schizomida): A new genus and species from the Upper Cretaceous amber of northern Myanmar". Cretaceous Research. 106: 104227. doi:10.1016/j.cretres.2019.104227.

References[]

External links[]

Retrieved from ""