Inodesmus
Appearance
Inodesmus | |
---|---|
Inodesmus steeli | |
Scientific classification ![]() | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Subphylum: | Myriapoda |
Class: | Diplopoda |
Order: | Polydesmida |
Family: | Haplodesmidae |
Genus: | Inodesmus Cook, 1896 |
Species | |
See text
| |
Synonyms | |
|
Inodesmus is a genus of millipedes in the family Haplodesmidae, first described by Orator F. Cook in 1896. The type species is I. jamaicensis. Members of this genus are found in Jamaica, New Caledonia, and the Australian states of Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, and South Australia.[1]
Taxonomy
Assignment to the family Haplodesmidae is currently uncertain. Agathodesmus, described by Silvestri in 1910,[2] and Atopogonus, described by J. Carl in 1926,[3] are regarded as junior synonyms of Inodesmus.[1]
Species
The genus Inodesmus consists of the following accepted species:[1]
- Inodesmus adelphus (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus aenigmaticus (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus agnus (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus anici (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus baccatus (Carl, 1926)
- Inodesmus bonang (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus bucculentus (Jeekel, 1986)
- Inodesmus carorum (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus chandleri (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus gayundah (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus hahnensis (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus jamaicensis Cook, 1896
- Inodesmus johnsi (Mesibov, 2009)
- Inodesmus kerensis (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus kirrama (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus millaa (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus morwellensis (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus parapholeus (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus quintanus (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus sagma (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus steeli (Silvestri, 1910)
- Inodesmus summus (Mesibov, 2013)
- Inodesmus urbanus (Romero-Rincon & Douch, 2024)
- Inodesmus yuccabinensis Mesibov, 2013)
References
- ^ ISSN 1175-5334.
- Wikidata Q119081814.
- Wikidata Q72932476.
External links
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/df/Wikispecies-logo.svg/34px-Wikispecies-logo.svg.png)
Wikispecies has information related to Inodesmus.