Ptocasius is a genus of Asian jumping spiders that was first described by Eugène Louis Simon in 1885.[2]
Ptocasius | |
---|---|
female P. strupifer from Hong Kong | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Chelicerata |
Class: | Arachnida |
Order: | Araneae |
Infraorder: | Araneomorphae |
Family: | Salticidae |
Subfamily: | Salticinae |
Subtribe: | Plexippina |
Genus: | Ptocasius Simon, 1885[1] |
Type species | |
P. weyersi Simon, 1885
| |
Species | |
52, see text |
Species
editAs of September 2022[update] it contains fifty-two species, found only in Asia:[1]
- Ptocasius badongensis (Song & Chai, 1992) – China
- Ptocasius bhutanicus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius bilagunculus (Xie & Peng, 1995) – China
- Ptocasius bulbosus (Peng, Tang & Li, 2008) – China
- Ptocasius cambridgei (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius falcatus (Zhu, J. X. Zhang, Z. S. Zhang & Chen, 2005) – China
- Ptocasius fulvonitens Simon, 1902 – Sri Lanka
- Ptocasius gogonaicus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius gratiosus Peckham & Peckham, 1907 – Singapore
- Ptocasius helvetorum (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius hubeiensis (Li, Wang, Irfan & Peng, 2018) – China
- Ptocasius hybridus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius incognitus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius intermedius (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius kinhi Żabka, 1985 – China, Vietnam
- Ptocasius linzhiensis Hu, 2001 – China
- Ptocasius linzhiensis (Hu, 2001) – China
- Ptocasius lushiensis (Zhang & Zhu, 2007) – China
- Ptocasius metzneri Patoleta, Gardzińska & Żabka, 2020 – Thailand
- Ptocasius montanus (Żabka, 1981) – China, Bhutan
- Ptocasius montiformis Song, 1991 – China
- Ptocasius nanyuensis (Xie & Peng, 1995) – China
- Ptocasius nepalicus (Żabka, 1980) – Nepal, China
- Ptocasius nobilis (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius novus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius orientalis (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius originalis (Żabka, 1981) – Myanmar
- Ptocasius paraweyersi Cao & Li, 2016 – China
- Ptocasius pilosus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius plumipalpis (Thorell, 1895) – Myanmar
- Ptocasius pseudoflexus (Liu, Yang & Peng, 2016) – China
- Ptocasius pulchellus (Li, Wang, Irfan & Peng, 2018) – China
- Ptocasius sakaerat Patoleta, Gardzińska & Żabka, 2020 – Thailand
- Ptocasius senchalensis (Prószyński, 1992) – India
- Ptocasius silvaticus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius simoni (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius songi Logunov, 1995 – China
- Ptocasius stemmleri (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius strandi (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius strupifer Simon, 1901 – China, Vietnam
- Ptocasius supinus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius tenellus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius tenzingi (Żabka, 1980) – Nepal
- Ptocasius thakkholaicus (Żabka, 1980) – Nepal, China
- Ptocasius thimphuicus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius urbanii (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius variegatus Logunov, 1995 – Kazakhstan
- Ptocasius versicolor (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius vittatus Song, 1991 – China
- Ptocasius wangdicus (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan
- Ptocasius weyersi Simon, 1885 (type) – Vietnam, Indonesia (Sumatra)
- Ptocasius wuermli (Żabka, 1981) – Bhutan, China
References
edit- ^ a b "Gen. Ptocasius Simon, 1885". World Spider Catalog Version 23.5. Natural History Museum Bern. 2022. doi:10.24436/2. Retrieved 8 September 2022.
- ^ Simon, E. (1885). "Arachnides recueillis par M. Weyers à Sumatra. Premier envoi". Annales de la Société Entomologique de Belgique. 29: 30–39.