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List Of Six-eyed Spiders
Six-eyed spiders are spiders that, unlike most spider species miss the principal pair of eyes, leaving them with only six eyes instead of the usual eight. List ''This list is incomplete'' *''Araneomorphae'' :*''Haplogynae'' ::*''Scytodoidea''-superfamily of six-eyed spiders :::*''Drymusidae'' :::*''Periegopidae'' :::*''Scytodes'' :::*''Sicariidae'' ::*''Leptonetoidea''-superfamily of six-eyed spiders :::*''Leptonetidae'' :::*''Ochyroceratidae'' :::*''Telemidae''-predominantly six-eyed, but some species with none. ::*''Pholcoidea'' :::*''Diguetidae''-family of six-eyed spiders :::*''Pholcidae''-predominantly eight eyed, but some species with six. ::::*''Pholcinae'' :::::*''Belisana (spider), Belisana'' ::::::*''Belisana aliformis'' (:Wikispecies:Belisana aliformis, at Wikispecies) ::::::*''Belisana huberi'' (:Wikispecies:Belisana huberi, at Wikispecies) ::::::*''Belisana lamellaris'' (:Wikispecies:Belisana lamellaris, at Wikispecies) ::::::*''Belisana zhangi'' (:Wikispecies:Belisan ...
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Spider
Spiders ( order Araneae) are air-breathing arthropods that have eight legs, chelicerae with fangs generally able to inject venom, and spinnerets that extrude silk. They are the largest order of arachnids and rank seventh in total species diversity among all orders of organisms. Spiders are found worldwide on every continent except for Antarctica, and have become established in nearly every land habitat. , 50,356 spider species in 132 families have been recorded by taxonomists. However, there has been debate among scientists about how families should be classified, with over 20 different classifications proposed since 1900. Anatomically, spiders (as with all arachnids) differ from other arthropods in that the usual body segments are fused into two tagmata, the cephalothorax or prosoma, and the opisthosoma, or abdomen, and joined by a small, cylindrical pedicel, however, as there is currently neither paleontological nor embryological evidence that spiders ever had ...
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Belisana (spider)
''Belisana'' is a genus of cellar spiders that was first described by Tamerlan Thorell in 1898. Species it contains 143 species, found in Asia, Papua New Guinea, on Fiji, in Australia, and Kiribati: *'' B. airai'' Huber, 2005 – Caroline Is. *'' B. akebona'' (Komatsu, 1961) – Japan *'' B. aliformis'' Tong & Li, 2008 – China *'' B. amabilis'' (Paik, 1978) – Korea *'' B. ambengan'' Huber, 2005 – Bali *'' B. anhuiensis'' (Xu & Wang, 1984) – China *'' B. aninaj'' Huber, 2005 – Thailand *'' B. apo'' Huber, 2005 – Philippines *'' B. australis'' Huber, 2001 – Indonesia (Moluccas), Australia (Northern Territory, Queensland) *'' B. babensis'' Yao, Pham & Li, 2015 – Vietnam *'' B. bachma'' Zhu & Li, 2021 – Vietnam *'' B. badulla'' Huber, 2019 – Sri Lanka *'' B. banlakwo'' Huber, 2005 – Thailand *'' B. bantham'' Huber, 2005 – Thailand *'' B. bawangensis'' Zhang & Peng, 2011 – China *'' B. benjamini'' Huber, 2005 – Sri Lanka *'' B. bohorok'' Huber, 2005 – M ...
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Caponiidae
Caponiidae is a family of ecribellate haplogyne spiders that are unusual in a number of ways. They differ from other spiders in lacking book lungs and having the posterior median spinnerets anteriorly displaced to form a transverse row with the anterior lateral spinnerets. Most species have only two eyes, which is also unusual among spiders. A few species of Caponiidae variously have four, six or eight eyes. In some species the number of eyes will increase when the spiderling changes its skin as it grows towards adulthood. Description These spiders of about are rarely noticed, but generally look like somewhat faded woodlouse hunter spiders in the genus ''Dysdera''. The carapace (cephalothorax or prosoma) is orange and the abdomen (opisthosoma) light gray. The two-eyed species have their two eyes in the anterior middle of the carapace. Eye numbers Caponiidae are unusual in the degree to which the eye number varies. In this they surpass even the family Cybaeidae in which some s ...
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Caponioidea
The Caponioidea or caponioids are a group of haplogyne araneomorph spiders that have been treated as superfamily with two members, the families Caponiidae and Tetrablemmidae. Phylogenetic studies from 1991 onwards have shown that the group is not monophyletic, being composed of two basal members of a larger clade A clade (), also known as a monophyletic group or natural group, is a group of organisms that are monophyletic – that is, composed of a common ancestor and all its lineal descendants – on a phylogenetic tree. Rather than the English term, .... The precise members of that clade differ from study to study; one hypothesis is shown below. References {{reflist, refs= {{Citation , last=Coddington , first=Jonathan A. , year=2005 , editor-last=Ubick , editor-first=D. , editor2-last=Paquin , editor2-first=P. , editor3-last=Cushing , editor3-first=P.E. , editor4-last=Roth , editor4-first=V. , contribution=Phylogeny and classification of spiders , title=Spiders of North ...
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Khorata Diaoluoshanensis
''Khorata'' is a genus of Asian cellar spiders that was first described by B. A. Huber in 2005. Species it contains fifty-one species, found only in Asia: *'' Khorata bachma'' Yao & Li, 2018 – Vietnam *'' Khorata bangkok'' Huber, 2005 – Thailand, Laos *'' Khorata bayeri'' Yao, Li & Jäger, 2014 – Thailand *'' Khorata circularis'' Yao & Li, 2013 – Laos *'' Khorata cucphuong'' Yao & Li, 2018 – Vietnam *'' Khorata dangi'' Yao, Pham & Li, 2015 – Vietnam *'' Khorata danxia'' Sheng & Xu, 2021 – China *'' Khorata dawei'' Yao & Li, 2019 – China *'' Khorata diaoluoshanensis'' Tong & Li, 2008 – China *'' Khorata digitata'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China, Vietnam *'' Khorata dongkou'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata dupla'' Yao & Li, 2013 – Laos *'' Khorata epunctata'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata flabelliformis'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata fusui'' Zhang & Zhu, 2009 – China *'' Khorata guiensis'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata huberi'' Yao, Pham ...
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Khorata
''Khorata'' is a genus of Asian cellar spiders that was first described by B. A. Huber in 2005. Species it contains fifty-one species, found only in Asia: *'' Khorata bachma'' Yao & Li, 2018 – Vietnam *'' Khorata bangkok'' Huber, 2005 – Thailand, Laos *'' Khorata bayeri'' Yao, Li & Jäger, 2014 – Thailand *'' Khorata circularis'' Yao & Li, 2013 – Laos *'' Khorata cucphuong'' Yao & Li, 2018 – Vietnam *'' Khorata dangi'' Yao, Pham & Li, 2015 – Vietnam *'' Khorata danxia'' Sheng & Xu, 2021 – China *'' Khorata dawei'' Yao & Li, 2019 – China *''Khorata diaoluoshanensis'' Tong & Li, 2008 – China *'' Khorata digitata'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China, Vietnam *'' Khorata dongkou'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata dupla'' Yao & Li, 2013 – Laos *'' Khorata epunctata'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata flabelliformis'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata fusui'' Zhang & Zhu, 2009 – China *'' Khorata guiensis'' Yao & Li, 2010 – China *'' Khorata huberi'' Yao, Pham ...
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Belisana Zhangi
Belisama (Gaulish ''Belesama''; epigraphically ) is a Celtic goddess. She was identified by Roman commentators with Minerva by ''interpretatio romana''. Name The Gaulish theonym ''Belesama'' has been traditionally interpreted as meaning 'the Very Bright', stemming from the Indo-European root ''*bʰelH-'' ('white, shining'; cf. Lith. ''báltas'' 'white', Greek φαλόσ ''phalós'' 'white', Arm. ''bal'' 'pallor', goth. ''bala'' 'grey') attached to the superlative suffix *-''isamā''. As for ''Belenos'', however, this theory has come under increasing criticism in contemporary scholarship. Xavier Delamarre notes that the proposed cognates stemming from ''*bʰelH-'' do not seem to connote 'shining', but rather 'white, grey, pale', and proposes to derive the name from the Gaulish root ''belo''- ('strong, powerful'), rendering ''Belesama'' as 'the Very Strong' (cf. Sanskrit ''baliṣṭhaḥ'' 'the strongest'). Alternatively, Peter Schrijver has conjectured a connection with the st ...
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Belisana Lamellaris
Belisama (Gaulish ''Belesama''; epigraphically ) is a Celtic goddess. She was identified by Roman commentators with Minerva by ''interpretatio romana''. Name The Gaulish theonym ''Belesama'' has been traditionally interpreted as meaning 'the Very Bright', stemming from the Indo-European root ''*bʰelH-'' ('white, shining'; cf. Lith. ''báltas'' 'white', Greek φαλόσ ''phalós'' 'white', Arm. ''bal'' 'pallor', goth. ''bala'' 'grey') attached to the superlative suffix *-''isamā''. As for ''Belenos'', however, this theory has come under increasing criticism in contemporary scholarship. Xavier Delamarre notes that the proposed cognates stemming from ''*bʰelH-'' do not seem to connote 'shining', but rather 'white, grey, pale', and proposes to derive the name from the Gaulish root ''belo''- ('strong, powerful'), rendering ''Belesama'' as 'the Very Strong' (cf. Sanskrit ''baliṣṭhaḥ'' 'the strongest'). Alternatively, Peter Schrijver has conjectured a connection with the st ...
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