Scotinella is a genus of North American araneomorph spiders in the family Phrurolithidae, first described by Nathan Banks in 1911.[2]
Scotinella | |
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Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Phrurolithidae |
Genus: | Scotinella Banks, 1911[1] |
Type species | |
S. pallida Banks, 1911
| |
Species | |
24, see text |
Species
editAs of February 2022[update] it contains twenty-four species:[1]
- Scotinella adjacens (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
- Scotinella approximata (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
- Scotinella britcheri (Petrunkevitch, 1910) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella brittoni (Gertsch, 1941) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella coahuilana (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
- Scotinella custeri Levi, 1951 – USA
- Scotinella debilis (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
- Scotinella deleta (Gertsch, 1941) – USA
- Scotinella diversa (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
- Scotinella divesta (Gertsch, 1941) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella divinula (Gertsch, 1941) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella dixiana Roddy, 1957 – USA
- Scotinella elpotosi Chamé-Vázquez & Jiménez, 2022 – Mexico
- Scotinella fratrella (Gertsch, 1935) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella madisonia Levi, 1951 – USA, Canada
- Scotinella manitou Levi, 1951 – USA
- Scotinella minnetonka (Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1930) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella pallida Banks, 1911 (type) – USA
- Scotinella pelvicolens (Chamberlin & Gertsch, 1930) – USA
- Scotinella pugnata (Emerton, 1890) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella redempta (Gertsch, 1941) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella sculleni (Gertsch, 1941) – USA, Canada
- Scotinella tamaulipana (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
- Scotinella tepejicana (Gertsch & Davis, 1940) – Mexico
References
edit- ^ a b "Gen. Scotinella Banks, 1911". World Spider Catalog Version 23.0. Natural History Museum Bern. 2022. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 11 February 2022.
- ^ Banks, N. (1911). "Some Arachnida from North Carolina". Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 63: 440–456.