MarketChrosiothes
Company Profile

Chrosiothes

Chrosiothes is a genus of comb-footed spiders that was first described by Eugène Louis Simon in 1894. It is considered a senior synonym of Theridiotis.

Species
it contains twenty-seven species that occurs almost exclusively in the New World from the United States to Brazil, with one species found in China, Korea and Japan, and two species endemic to Taiwan: • Chrosiothes carajaensis Puchulú-Figueiredo, Santanna & Rodrigues, 2017 – BrazilChrosiothes chirica (Levi, 1954) – USA, MexicoChrosiothes cicuta Puchulú-Figueiredo, Santanna & Rodrigues, 2017 – Brazil • Chrosiothes decorus Puchulú-Figueiredo, Santanna & Rodrigues, 2017 – Brazil • Chrosiothes diabolicus Puchulú-Figueiredo, Santanna & Rodrigues, 2017 – Brazil • Chrosiothes episinoides (Levi, 1963) – ChileChrosiothes fulvus Yoshida, Tso & Severinghaus, 2000 – TaiwanChrosiothes goodnightorum (Levi, 1954) – Mexico to Costa Rica • Chrosiothes iviei Levi, 1964 – USA • Chrosiothes jamaicensis Levi, 1964 – Jamaica, Dominican Rep. • Chrosiothes jenningsi Piel, 1995 – USA • Chrosiothes jocosus (Gertsch & Davis, 1936) – USA, Mexico • Chrosiothes litus Levi, 1964 – Mexico • Chrosiothes minusculus (Gertsch, 1936) – USA, Mexico • Chrosiothes murici Puchulú-Figueiredo, Santanna & Rodrigues, 2017 – Brazil • Chrosiothes niteroi Levi, 1964 – Bolivia, Brazil, ArgentinaChrosiothes perfidus Marques & Buckup, 1997 – Brazil • Chrosiothes portalensis Levi, 1964 – USA, Mexico • Chrosiothes proximus (O. Pickard-Cambridge, 1899) – Mexico to Panama • Chrosiothes silvaticus Simon, 1894 (type) – USA to Ecuador • Chrosiothes sudabides (Bösenberg & Strand, 1906) – China, Korea, JapanChrosiothes taiwan Yoshida, Tso & Severinghaus, 2000 – Taiwan • Chrosiothes tonala (Levi, 1954) – Mexico to Honduras • Chrosiothes una Puchulú-Figueiredo, Santanna & Rodrigues, 2017 – Brazil • Chrosiothes valmonti (Simon, 1898) – St. Vincent • Chrosiothes venturosus Marques & Buckup, 1997 – Brazil • Chrosiothes wagneri (Levi, 1954) – Mexico Formerly included:C. australis (Simon, 1896) (Transferred to Episinus) ==References==
tickerdossier.comtickerdossier.substack.com