Pseudotyrannochthonius Explained
Pseudotyrannochthonius is a genus of pseudoscorpions in the family Pseudotyrannochthoniidae. It was described in 1930 by Austrian arachnologist Max Beier.[1]
Species
, the World Pseudoscorpiones Catalog accepted the following 18 species:[2]
- P. australiensis Beier, 1966
- P. bornemisszai Beier, 1966
- P. eberhardi Harms and Harvey, 2013
- P. giganteus Beier, 1971
- P. gigas Beier, 1969
- P. gracilis Benedict and Malcolm, 1970
- P. hamiltonsmithi Beier, 1968
- P. incognitus (Schuster, 1966)
- P. jonesi (Chamberlin, 1962)
- P. leichhardti Harms, 2013
- P. octospinosus Beier, 1930
- P. queenslandicus Beier, 1969
- P. rossi Beier, 1964
- P. silvestrii (Ellingsen, 1905)
- P. solitarius (Hoff, 1951)
- P. tasmanicus Dartnall, 1970
- P. typhlus Dartnall, 1970
- P. utahensis Muchmore, 1967
Notes and References
- Web site: Genus Pseudotyrannochthonius Beier, 1930 . . 2022-05-10. Australian Faunal Directory . Dept of Climate Change, Energy, the Environment and Water, Australia . 2023-10-06.
- Web site: 2023 . Genus: Pseudotyrannochthonius Beier, 1930 . World Arachnida Catalog . Natural History Museum Bern. 2023-10-06.