Pandercetes
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Pandercetes
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *'' Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes ...
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Pandercetes Manoius
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *'' Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes ...
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Pandercetes Macilentus
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *'' Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes ...
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Pandercetes Celebensis
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *'' Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes ...
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Pandercetes Celatus
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *''Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes d ...
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Pandercetes Longipes
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *'' Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes ...
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Pandercetes Isopus
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *'' Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes ...
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Pandercetes Malleator
''Pandercetes'' is a genus of huntsman spiders that was first described by Ludwig Carl Christian Koch in his 1875 treatise on Australian spiders. They are mainly distributed in tropical Asia and Australia, and are known for their cryptic coloration that matches local moss and lichen. Their legs have lateral hairs, giving them a feathery appearance, further masking their outline against tree trunks. Their head is somewhat elevated and the carapace has the thoracic region low and flat. The genus is characterized by the internal anatomy of the reproductive structures. Males have irregular coils at the terminal end, while females have screw like copulatory ducts. Species it contains sixteen species and one subspecies, found in tropical forests in Asia, extending east to Australia: *'' Pandercetes celatus'' Pocock, 1899 – India *'' Pandercetes celebensis'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) **'' Pandercetes c. vulcanicola'' Merian, 1911 – Indonesia (Sulawesi) *'' Pandercetes ...
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Pandercetes Decipiens
''Pandercetes decipiens'', is a species of spider of the genus ''Pandercetes''. It is native to India and Sri Lanka. See also * List of Sparassidae species This page lists all described genera and species of the spider family Sparassidae. , the World Spider Catalog accepts 1383 species in 96 genera: * '' † Sparassidae sp.'' Wunderlich, 2008c — Palaeogen Baltic amber A ''Adcatomus'' '' Adcatomu ... References Sparassidae Arthropods of Sri Lanka Spiders of Asia Spiders described in 1899 {{sparassidae-stub ...
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Pandercetes Gracilis
''Pandercetes gracilis'', also called the lichen huntsman spider and the lichen spider, is a huntsman spider found on New Guinea, the Maluku Islands, Sulawesi Sulawesi (), also known as Celebes (), is an island in Indonesia. One of the four Greater Sunda Islands, and the world's eleventh-largest island, it is situated east of Borneo, west of the Maluku Islands, and south of Mindanao and the Sulu Ar ..., and in Queensland, Australia. Individuals can vary in color and many color forms exist, but unlike squids and certain reptiles, color is fixed at its previous molt. It hunts by hiding among moss and lichen, then ambushing prey that comes into range by pouncing on it. References {{Taxonbar, from=Q1925524 * Spiders of Indonesia Spiders of Australia Spiders described in 1875 ...
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Sparassidae
Huntsman spiders, members of the family Sparassidae (formerly Heteropodidae), are known by this name because of their speed and mode of hunting. They are also called giant crab spiders because of their size and appearance. Larger species sometimes are referred to as wood spiders, because of their preference for woody places (forests, mine shafts, woodpiles, wooden shacks). In southern Africa the genus ''Palystes'' are known as rain spiders or lizard-eating spiders. Commonly, they are confused with baboon spiders from the Mygalomorphae infraorder, which are not closely related. More than a thousand Sparassidae species occur in most warm temperate to tropical regions of the world, including much of Australasia, Africa, Asia, the Mediterranean Basin, and the Americas. Several species of huntsman spider can use an unusual form of locomotion. The wheel spider (''Carparachne aureoflava'') from the Namib uses a cartwheeling motion which gives it its name, while ''Cebrennus rechenbergi ...
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Myanmar
Myanmar, ; UK pronunciations: US pronunciations incl. . Note: Wikipedia's IPA conventions require indicating /r/ even in British English although only some British English speakers pronounce r at the end of syllables. As John C. Wells, John Wells explains, the English spellings of both Myanmar and Burma assume a non-rhotic variety of English, in which the letter r before a consonant or finally serves merely to indicate a long vowel: [ˈmjænmɑː, ˈbɜːmə]. So the pronunciation of the last syllable of Myanmar as [mɑːr] or of Burma as [bɜːrmə] by some speakers in the UK and most speakers in North America is in fact a spelling pronunciation based on a misunderstanding of non-rhotic spelling conventions. The final ''r'' in ''Myanmar'' was not intended for pronunciation and is there to ensure that the final a is pronounced with the broad a, broad ''ah'' () in "father". If the Burmese name my, မြန်မာ, label=none were spelled "Myanma" in English, this would b ...
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Tamerlan Thorell
Tord Tamerlan Teodor Thorell (3 May 1830 – 22 December 1901) was a Sweden, Swedish arachnologist. Thorell studied spiders with Giacomo Doria at the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale de Genoa. He corresponded with other arachnologists, such as Octavius Pickard-Cambridge, Eugène Simon and Thomas Workman (entomologist), Thomas Workman. He described more than 1,000 spider species during his time from the 1850 to 1900. Thorell wrote: ''On European Spiders'' (1869) and ''Synonym of European Spiders'' (1870-73). Taxonomic honors The Orb-weaver spider genus ''Thorellina'' and the jumping spider genus ''Thorelliola'' are named after him, as well as about 30 species of spiders: * ''Araneus thorelli'' (Roewer, 1942) (Myanmar) (Araneidae) * ''Gasteracantha thorelli'' Keyserling, 1864 (Madagascar) (Araneidae) * ''Leviellus thorelli'' (Ausserer, 1871) (Europe) (Araneidae) * ''Mandjelia thorelli'' (Raven, 1990) (Queensland) (Barychelidae) * ''Clubiona thorelli'' Roewer, 1951 (Sumatra) (Clubi ...
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