Chthoniidae
Chthoniidae is a family of pseudoscorpions within the superfamily Chthonioidea. The family contains more than 600 species in about 30 genera. Fossil species are known from Baltic, Dominican, and Burmese amber.[1] Chthoniidae now includes the former families Tridenchthoniidae, and Lechytiidae which has been demoted to subfamilies.[2]
Chthoniidae Temporal range: | |
---|---|
Chthonius sp. | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Pseudoscorpiones |
Superfamily: | Chthonioidea |
Family: | Chthoniidae Daday, 1888 |
Genera | |
See text | |
Diversity | |
c. 30 genera, > 600 species | |
Synonyms | |
Chthonidae |
Genera
For a list of all currently described species see List of Chthoniidae species.
- Aphrastochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1962 — Mexico, southern US, Guatemala, Cuba
- Apochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929 — North America
- Austrochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929 — South America, Australia, New Zealand
- Caribchthonius Muchmore, 1976 — Caribbean
- Chiliochthonius Vitali-di Castri, 1975 — Chile
- Chthonius C. L. Koch, 1843 — Europe to Iran, North Africa, Balearic Islands, USA; one cosmopolitan species
- Congochthonius Beier, 1959 — Zaire
- Drepanochthonius Beier, 1964 — Chile
- Francochthonius Vitali-di Castri, 1975 — Chile
- Kleptochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1949 — USA
- Lagynochthonius Beier, 1951 — Australasia, Africa
- Malcolmochthonius Benedict, 1978 — USA
- Maorichthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1925 — New Zealand
- Mexichthonius Muchmore, 1975 — Mexico, Texas
- Mundochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929 — Eurasia, Dominican Republic, North America
- Neochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929 — California, Romania (?)
- Paraliochthonius Beier, 1956 — Europe, Africa, Florida, several islands
- Pseudochthonius Balzan, 1892 — South, Central America, Africa
- Sathrochthoniella Beier, 1967 — New Zealand
- Sathrochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1962 — Australia to New Caledonia, South America
- Spelyngochthonius Beier, 1955 — Sardinia, Spain, France
- Stygiochthonius Carabajal Marquez, Garcia Carrillo & Rodriguez Fernandez, 2001 — Spain
- Troglochthonius Beier, 1939 — Italy, Yugoslavia
- Tyrannochthoniella Beier, 1966 — New Zealand
- Tyrannochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929 — Brazil to southern USA, Australasia, Africa, Hawaii
- Vulcanochthonius Muchmore, 2000 — Hawai'i
- †Weygoldtiella Harvey et al., 2018 — Burmese amber, Myanmar Cenomanian
- †Prionochthonius — Burmese amber, Myanmar Cenomanian
Tridenchthoniinae
- Anaulacodithella — Southern Africa, Australia, New Caledonia
- † Chelignathus
- Compsaditha — Africa, South America, South and Southeast Asia, Seychelles
- Cryptoditha — South America
- Ditha — Africa, Southeast Asia, Oceania
- Dithella — Southeast Asia
- Haploditha — South America
- Heterolophus — Australia, South America
- Neoditha — South America
- Pycnodithella — Africa, Australia
- Sororoditha — South America
- Tridenchthonius — Africa, South and Central America
- Typhloditha — Africa
- Verrucaditha — North America
- Verrucadithella — Africa, South America
Lechytiinae
- Lechytia Balzan, 1892 Worldwide
References
- Biology Catalog
- Benavides, Ligia R.; Cosgrove, Julia G.; Harvey, Mark S.; Giribet, Gonzalo (October 2019). "Phylogenomic interrogation resolves the backbone of the Pseudoscorpiones tree of life". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 139: 106509. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2019.05.023. PMID 31132522. S2CID 167218890.
- Joel Hallan's Biology Catalog: Chthoniidae
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.