Acanthops

Acanthops
Adult female Acanthops falcataria
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Mantodea
Family: Acanthopidae
Subfamily: Acanthopinae
Tribe: Acanthopini
Genus: Acanthops
Serville, 1831
Species
  • Acanthops bidens (Hebard, 1922)
  • Acanthops brunneri (Saussure, 1871)
  • Acanthops boliviana (Chopard, 1916)
  • Acanthops royi (Lombardo & Ippolito, 2004)
  • Acanthops centralis (Lombardo & Ippolito, 2004)
  • Acanthops contorta (Gerstaecker, 1889)
  • Acanthops falcataria (Goeze, 1778)
  • Acanthops falcata (Stal, 1877)
  • Acanthops fuscifolia (Olivier, 1792)
  • Acanthops erosa (Serville, 1839)
  • Acanthops elegans (Lombardo & Ippolito, 2004)
  • Acanthops erosula (Stal, 1877)
  • Acanthops godmani (Saussure & Zehntner, 1894)
  • Acanthops occidentalis (Lombardo & Ippolito, 2004)
  • Acanthops onorei (Lombardo & Ippolito, 2004)
  • Acanthops parafalcata (Lombardo & Ippolito, 2004)
  • Acanthops parva (Beier, 1941)
  • Acanthops oukana (Roy, 2002)
  • Acanthops tuberculata (Saussure, 1870)
Synonyms

Plesiacanthops (Chopard, 1913)

Acanthops is a genus in the subfamily Acanthopinae of the family Acanthopidae, containing 19 species that can be found in South America.[1]

See also

References

  1. Francesco Lombardo & Salvatrice Ippolito (2004). "Revision of the species of Acanthops Serville 1831 (Mantodea, Mantidae, Acanthopinae) with comments on their phylogeny". Annals of the Entomological Society of America 97 (6): 1076–1102. doi:10.1603/0013-8746(2004)097[1076:ROTSOA]2.0.CO;2.


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