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Triaeris

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Triaeris is a genus of goblin spiders erected by Eugène Simon in 1890 for the species Triaeris stenaspis. It was described from females from the Lesser Antilles; specimens were found later in heated greenhouses around Europe. No males of T. stenaspis have ever been found and the species may be parthenogenetic.[2] Its taxonomy is confused, and the number of species that should be placed in the genus is unclear. In 2012, Norman I. Platnick and co-authors described the genus Triaeris as "an enigma wrapped around a mystery". They consider that most species assigned to the genus after Simon in 1890 and before 2012 do not belong to Triaeris.[2]

Species

As of April 2016, the World Spider Catalog accepted the following species.[1] The assignment to groups is based on Platnick et al. (2012).[2]

  • True species of Triaeris
  • African species that should be placed in other related genera
  • Indian species considered misidentified ("wildly misplaced"[2])

References

  1. ^ a b c "Gen. Triaeris Simon, 1890", World Spider Catalog, Natural History Museum Bern, retrieved 2016-04-30
  2. ^ a b c d Platnick, N.I.; Dupérré, N.; Ubick, D. & Fannes, W. (2012), "Got males? The enigmatic goblin spider genus Triaeris (Araneae, Oonopidae)", American Museum Novitates (3756): 1–36, doi:10.1206/3756.2, hdl:2246/6369, S2CID 83923612
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Triaeris: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Triaeris is a genus of goblin spiders erected by Eugène Simon in 1890 for the species Triaeris stenaspis. It was described from females from the Lesser Antilles; specimens were found later in heated greenhouses around Europe. No males of T. stenaspis have ever been found and the species may be parthenogenetic. Its taxonomy is confused, and the number of species that should be placed in the genus is unclear. In 2012, Norman I. Platnick and co-authors described the genus Triaeris as "an enigma wrapped around a mystery". They consider that most species assigned to the genus after Simon in 1890 and before 2012 do not belong to Triaeris.

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