Taxonomy Profile: Pirata indigenus (Wallace & Exline 1978)

Pirata indigenus: Taxonomy and Nomenclature
Kingdom:
Animalia
Taxonomic Rank:
Species
Synonym(s):
Common Name(s):
Taxonomic Status:
Current Standing:
valid
Data Quality Indicators:
Record Credibility Rating:
TWG standards met
Pirata indigenus: Taxonomic Hierarchy
Kingdom : Animalia
animals |
Animal |
animaux |
Subkingdom : Bilateria
Infrakingdom : Protostomia
Superdivision : Ecdysozoa
Phylum : Arthropoda
arthropods |
Artrópode |
arthropodes |
Subphylum : Chelicerata
cheliceriformes |
quelicerado |
queliceriforme |
Subclass : Arachnida
araignées |
aracnídeo |
arachnids |
arácnidos |
Order : Araneae
spiders |
aranhas |
araignées |
arañas |
Family : Lycosidae
wolf spiders |
Genus : Pirata
pirate wolf spiders |
Pirata indigenus Direct Children(s):
Pirata indigenus: References
Expert(s):
Source(s):
Source:
World Spider Catalog, Version 11.0
Acquired:
2011-10-15
Notes:
Platnick, Norman I. 2011. The World Spider Catalog, v.11.0. American Museum of Natural History. Database built by Robert J. Raven from the files underlying the website at http://research.amnh.org/iz/spiders/catalog/ DOI: 10.5531/db.iz.0001
Reference for:
Pirata indigenus
Source:
World Spider Catalog, Version 20.5 (2019)
Acquired:
2019-11-21
Notes:
World Spider Catalog (2019). Version 20.5. Natural History Museum Bern, online at http://wsc.nmbe.ch, accessed on 21 Nov 2019. doi: 10.24436/2
Reference for:
Pirata indigenus
Publication(s):
Pirata indigenus: Geographic Information
Geographic Division:
North America
Jurisdiction/Origin:
Continental US / Native
Pirata indigenus: Comments
Comment:
Originally published as Pirata indiginus, but the accepted name was changed in late 2016 to Pirata indigina in the World Spider Catalog. There was no indication of whether the original author considered the epithet to be a noun or an ajective, and it can be either in Latin. Under ICZN Art. 31.2.2, it must be treated as a noun in apposition, not an adjectival usage. Therefore the original spelling must be retained without changing the gender to match that of the current genus