Chthoniidae

Chthoniidae is a family of pseudoscorpions within the superfamily Chthonioidea. The family contains more than 600 species in about 30 genera. Three fossil species are known from Baltic and Dominican amber.[1]

Chthoniidae
Temporal range: Cretaceous–present
Chthonius sp.
Scientific classification
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

Genera

For a list of all currently described species see List of Chthoniidae species.

  • Afrochthonius Beier, 1930Africa, Sri Lanka
  • Allochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929Japan, Korea
  • Aphrastochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1962Mexico, southern US, Guatemala, Cuba
  • Apochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929North America
  • Austrochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929South America, Australia, New Zealand
  • Caribchthonius Muchmore, 1976Caribbean
  • Centrochthonius Beier, 1931Russia, China, Tibet, India, Nepal
  • Chiliochthonius Vitali-di Castri, 1975Chile
  • Chthonius C. L. Koch, 1843Europe to Iran, North Africa, Balearic Islands, USA; one cosmopolitan species
  • Congochthonius Beier, 1959Zaire
  • Drepanochthonius Beier, 1964 — Chile
  • Francochthonius Vitali-di Castri, 1975 — Chile
  • Kleptochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1949 — USA
  • Lagynochthonius Beier, 1951Australasia, Africa
  • Malcolmochthonius Benedict, 1978 — USA
  • Maorichthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1925 — New Zealand
  • Mexichthonius Muchmore, 1975 — Mexico, Texas
  • Mundochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929Eurasia, Dominican Republic, North America
  • Neochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929California, Romania (?)
  • Paraliochthonius Beier, 1956 — Europe, Africa, Florida, several islands
  • Pseudochthonius Balzan, 1892 — South, Central America, Africa
  • Pseudotyrannochthonius Beier, 1930 — Australia, Japan, Korea, USA, Chile
  • Sathrochthoniella Beier, 1967 — New Zealand
  • Sathrochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1962 — Australia to New Caledonia, South America
  • Selachochthonius J. C. Chamberlin, 1929 — southern Africa
  • Spelyngochthonius Beier, 1955Sardinia, Spain, France
  • Stygiochthonius Carabajal Marquez, Garcia Carrillo & Rodriguez Fernandez, 2001 — Spain
  • Troglochthonius Beier, 1939Italy, 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., 2018Burmese amber, Myanmar Cenomanian

Footnotes

  1. Biology Catalog

References


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.