Paracharon Explained
Paracharon is a genus of tailless whip scorpion. A single species, Paracharon caecus has been described. It is endemic to Guinea-Bissau in West Africa[1] It is one of two living genera of the family Paracharontidae, alongside the South American Jorottui.[2] It is a troglobite having no eyes, with P. caecus found living in termite nests.[3] [4]
Notes and References
- Book: Harvey, M.S.. 2003. Catalogue of the Smaller Arachnid Orders of the World: Amblypygi, Uropygi, Schizomida, Palpigradi, Ricinulei and Solifugae. Collingwood, Victoria, Australia. CSIRO Publishing. 31.
- Moreno-González . Jairo A. . Gutierrez-Estrada . Miguel . Prendini . Lorenzo . 2023-06-28 . Systematic Revision of the Whip Spider Family Paracharontidae (Arachnida: Amblypygi) with Description of a New Troglobitic Genus and Species from Colombia . American Museum Novitates . 4000 . 1–36 . 10.1206/4000.1 . 0003-0082.
- Miranda . Gustavo S. de . Kulkarni . Siddharth S. . Tagliatela . Jéssica . Baker . Caitlin M. . Giupponi . Alessandro P. L. . Labarque . Facundo M. . Gavish-Regev . Efrat . Rix . Michael G. . Carvalho . Leonardo S. . Fusari . Lívia Maria . Wood . Hannah M. . 2022-04-27 . The rediscovery of a relict unlocks the first global phylogeny of whip spiders (Amblypygi) . en . 2022.04.26.489547 . 10.1101/2022.04.26.489547. 248453237 .
- Garwood . Russell J. . Dunlop . Jason A. . Knecht . Brian J. . Hegna . Thomas A. . December 2017 . The phylogeny of fossil whip spiders . BMC Evolutionary Biology . en . 17 . 1 . 105 . 10.1186/s12862-017-0931-1 . 1471-2148 . 5399839 . 28431496 . free . 2017BMCEE..17..105G .