Stanwellia grisea
(Redirected from Chenistonia major)
Taxonavigation
editTaxonavigation: Nemesioidea |
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Superregnum: Eukaryota |
Familia: Pycnothelidae
Genus: Stanwellia
Species: Stanwellia grisea
Name
editStanwellia grisea (Hogg, 1901)
Type locality: Macedon, Victoria
Lectotype: BMNH. (lectotype Aname grisea designated by Main, 1972: 105)
Synonymy
edit- Aname grisea Hogg, 1901: 252 (original combination)
- Stanwellia grisea (Hogg): Main, 1972: 105
- Aname arborea Hogg, 1901: 254
- Type locality: Macedon, Australia
- Lectotype: BMNH. female ♀. (lectotype designated by Main, 1972: 105)
- Type locality: Macedon, Australia
- Aname pellucida Hogg, 1901: 255
- Type locality: Bacchus Marsh, Australia
- Lectotype: BMNH. female ♀. (lectotype designated by Main, 1972: 105)
- Type locality: Bacchus Marsh, Australia
- Ixamatus gregorii Hogg, 1901: 258
- Type locality: Macedon, Australia.
- Holotype: BMNH. male ♂.
- Type locality: Macedon, Australia.
- Chenistonia major Hogg, 1901: 263
- Type locality: Macedon, Australia.
- Lectotype: BMNH. female ♀. (lectotype designated by Main, 1972: 105)
- Type locality: Macedon, Australia.
- Aname butleri Rainbow & Pulleine, 1918: 157
- Type locality: Merri Creek, Melbourne, Australia
- Lectotype: AM. male ♂. K41482. (lectotype designated by Main, 1972: 105)
- Type locality: Merri Creek, Melbourne, Australia
References
editPrimary references
edit- Hogg, H.R. 1901. On Australian and New Zealand spiders of the suborder Mygalomorphae. Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 71(1): 218-279. DOI: 10.1111/j.1469-7998.1901.tb08176.x. . Reference page.
Additional references
edit- Main, B.Y. 1972. The mygalomorph spider genus Stanwellia Rainbow & Pulleine (Dipluridae) and its relationship to Aname Koch and certain other diplurine genera. Journal and Proceedings of the Royal Society of Western Australia 55: 100-114. Reference page.
- Rainbow, W.J. & Pulleine, R.H. 1918. Australian trap-door spiders. Records of the Australian Museum 12: 81-169. Reference page.
Links
edit- Platnick, N. I. 2008. The World Spider Catalog, version 9.0. American Museum of Natural History. [1]
Vernacular names
editEnglish: Melbourne Trapdoor Spider