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Languages : en
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New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae *, Raneae, Haplogynae*, from Iran. (American Museum Novitates, No. 3656)
New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae?(?Araneae, Haplogynae?)? from Iran. (American Museum Novitates, No. 3656).
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Languages : en
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Languages : en
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New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from California. American Museum Novitates
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Languages : en
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Languages : en
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New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from the West Indies. (American Museum Novitates, No. 3705).
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Languages : en
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Languages : en
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On the First Asian Spiders of the Family Caponiidae *, Raneae, Haplogynae*, with Notes on the African Genus Diploglena. American Museum Novitates, No. 3634
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Languages : en
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Languages : en
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A New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from Iran
Author: Yvonne Kranz-Baltensperger
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Category : Iraponia scutata
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
A new genus and species, Iraponia scutata, are established for the first members of the Caponiidae to be found in Iran. Males of this new genus, the second known from Asia, are unique in the family in having an extensive ventral abdominal scutum, and in having lost the posterior median pair of spinnerets. These caponiids have six eyes, a character shared only with some members of the New World genus Caponina.
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Category : Iraponia scutata
Languages : en
Pages : 0
Book Description
A new genus and species, Iraponia scutata, are established for the first members of the Caponiidae to be found in Iran. Males of this new genus, the second known from Asia, are unique in the family in having an extensive ventral abdominal scutum, and in having lost the posterior median pair of spinnerets. These caponiids have six eyes, a character shared only with some members of the New World genus Caponina.
A New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from Iran
Author: Yvonne Kranz-Baltensperger
Publisher:
ISBN:
Category : Iraponia scutata
Languages : en
Pages : 12
Book Description
Publisher:
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Category : Iraponia scutata
Languages : en
Pages : 12
Book Description
On the First Asian Spiders of the Family Caponiidae?(?Araneae, Haplogynae?)?, with Notes on the African Genus Diploglena. American Museum Novitates
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Languages : en
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Languages : en
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A New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from California
Author: Norman I. Platnick
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Category : Calponia harrisonfordi
Languages : en
Pages : 8
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Category : Calponia harrisonfordi
Languages : en
Pages : 8
Book Description
A New Genus of the Spider Family Caponiidae (Araneae, Haplogynae) from the West Indies
Author: Alexander Sánchez-Ruiz
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Category : Caponiidae
Languages : en
Pages : 44
Book Description
A new genus, Cubanops, is established for a distinctive group of caponiid spiders from the West Indies. Nops ludovicorum Alayón, from Cuba, and Caponina darlingtoni Bryant, from Hispaniola, are transferred to Cubanops. Nine new species are described from the Bahama Islands (C. bimini, C. andersoni), Cuba (C. armasi, C. alayoni, C. juragua, C. granpiedra, C. terueli, C. tortuguilla), and Hispaniola (C. vega). All these species are nopines (i.e., have subsegmented tarsi) and have the ventral translucent keel on the anterior metatarsi, and the translucent extension of the membrane between the anterior metatarsi and tarsi, that are also found in the genera Nops MacLeay, Orthonops Chamberlin, and Tarsonops Chamberlin. However, Cubanops species lack the dorsally extended inferior claw found in Nops, and differ from those of Orthonops and Tarsonops in having a distinctly patterned carapace, a widened labium, and bisegmented metatarsi IV. Two species groups are recognized within the genus, which probably occurs also in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, as juveniles with these somatic characters have been taken on St. John.
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Category : Caponiidae
Languages : en
Pages : 44
Book Description
A new genus, Cubanops, is established for a distinctive group of caponiid spiders from the West Indies. Nops ludovicorum Alayón, from Cuba, and Caponina darlingtoni Bryant, from Hispaniola, are transferred to Cubanops. Nine new species are described from the Bahama Islands (C. bimini, C. andersoni), Cuba (C. armasi, C. alayoni, C. juragua, C. granpiedra, C. terueli, C. tortuguilla), and Hispaniola (C. vega). All these species are nopines (i.e., have subsegmented tarsi) and have the ventral translucent keel on the anterior metatarsi, and the translucent extension of the membrane between the anterior metatarsi and tarsi, that are also found in the genera Nops MacLeay, Orthonops Chamberlin, and Tarsonops Chamberlin. However, Cubanops species lack the dorsally extended inferior claw found in Nops, and differ from those of Orthonops and Tarsonops in having a distinctly patterned carapace, a widened labium, and bisegmented metatarsi IV. Two species groups are recognized within the genus, which probably occurs also in Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands, as juveniles with these somatic characters have been taken on St. John.