Cladonychiidae
Cladonychiidae | |
---|---|
Cryptomaster behemoth - Male (top) and female | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Opiliones |
Suborder: | Laniatores |
Superfamily: | Travunioidea |
Family: | Cladonychiidae Hadži, 1935 |
Species | |
see text | |
Diversity | |
5 genera, c. 16 species | |
Synonyms | |
Erebromastridae |
The Cladonychiidae are a small family of harvestman with less than twenty described species, within the suborder Laniatores.
Description
Members of this family range from less than two to about four millimeters in body length, with robust, spined pedipalps and rather short legs, although the second pair can be as long as two centimeter. Most Cladonychiidae are reddish brown to dark brown, but cave-dwelling species are pale yellow. Not all species have eyes.[1]
Distribution
The genus Holoscotolemon is palearctic, ranging from France to Romania and Serbia and Montenegro, with most species found in northern Italy. All other genera are found in the USA.[1]
Fossils
Proholoscotolemon was recently found in Baltic amber.
Relationships
Cladonychiidae are possibly related to Pentanychidae. If this is the case, the Cladonychiidae from the eastern US would be basal to the family.[1]
Name
The name of the former type genus Cladonychium (now synonymized with Erebomaster) is derived from Ancient Greek "branched claw".[1]
Species
- Cryptomaster Briggs, 1969
- Cryptomaster behemoth Starrett & Derkarabetian, 2016[2] — Oregon
- Cryptomaster leviathan (Briggs, 1969) — Oregon
- Erebomaster Cope, 1872
- Erebomaster flavescens Cope, 1872 — caves; Virginia, Indiana, Kentucky
- Erebomaster flavescens flavescens Cope, 1872
- Erebomaster flavescens weyerensis (Packard, 1888) — Weyer's cave; Virginia
- Erebomaster flavescens coecum (Packard, 1888) — Carter cave
- Erebomaster acanthina (Crosby & Bishop, 1924) — southeastern U.S.
- Erebomaster flavescens Cope, 1872 — caves; Virginia, Indiana, Kentucky
- Holoscotolemon Roewer, 1915
- Holoscotolemon unicolor Roewer, 1915 — East Tyrol
- Holoscotolemon jaqueti (Corti, 1905) — Romania
- Holoscotolemon querilhaci (Lucas, 1864) — southern France
- Holoscotolemon granulatus Roewer, 1915
- Holoscotolemon franzinii M. Tedeschi & R. Sciaky, 1994 — Italy
- Holoscotolemon lessiniense J. Martens, 1978 — Italy
- Holoscotolemon monzinii M. Tedeschi & R. Sciaky, 1994 — Italy
- Holoscotolemon naturae M. Tedeschi & R. Sciaky, 1994 — Italy
- Holoscotolemon oreophilum J. Martens, 1978 — Italy
- Speleomaster Briggs, 1974
- Speleomaster lexi Briggs, 1974 — Idaho
- Speleomaster pecki Briggs, 1974
- Theromaster Briggs, 1969
- Theromaster archeri (Goodnight & Goodnight, 1942) — Alabama
- Theromaster brunnea (Banks, 1902) — Yancy County, North Carolina
Footnotes
- 1 2 3 4 Briggs, Thomas S. & Ubick, Darrell (2007): Cladonychiidae Hadži, 1935. In: Pinto-da-Rocha et al. 2007: 179ff
- ↑ James Starrett, Shahan Derkarabetian, Casey H. Richart, Allan Cabrero, Marshal Hedin. 2016. A new monster from southwest Oregon forests: Cryptomaster behemoth sp. n. (Opiliones, Laniatores, Travunioidea). ZooKeys 555: 11-35 (20 Jan 2016), accessible at http://zookeys.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=6274, 26 Jan 2016; doi: 10.3897/zookeys.555.6274.
References
- Joel Hallan's Biology Catalog: Cladonychiidae
- Pinto-da-Rocha, R., Machado, G. & Giribet, G. (eds.) (2007): Harvestmen - The Biology of Opiliones. Harvard University Press ISBN 0-674-02343-9