Superregnum: Eukaryota
Cladus: Unikonta
Cladus: Opisthokonta
Cladus: Holozoa
Regnum: Animalia
Subregnum: Eumetazoa
Cladus: Bilateria
Cladus: Nephrozoa
Cladus: Protostomia
Cladus: Ecdysozoa
Cladus: Panarthropoda
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Hexapoda
Classis: Insecta
Cladus: Dicondylia
Subclassis: Pterygota
Cladus: Metapterygota
Infraclassis: Neoptera
Supercohort: Polyneoptera
Cohort: Anartioptera
Magnordo: Polyorthoptera
Superordo: Dermapterida
Ordo: Dermaptera
Subordo: Neodermaptera
Infraordo: Epidermaptera
Parvordo: Metadermaptera
Superfamilia: Anisolabidoidea
Familia: Anisolabididae
Subfamiliae: Anisolabidinae – Anophthalmolabidinae – Antisolabidinae – Brachylabidinae – Gonolabininae – Idolopsalidinae – Isolabidinae – Parisolabidinae – Platylabiinae – Titanolabidinae – †Cretolabiinae
Overview of genera
Aborolabis – Africolabis – Anisolabella – Anisolabis – Anophthalmolabis – Antisolabis – Brachylabis – Idolopsalis – Titanolabis – ...
Name
Anisolabididae Verhoeff, 1902
References
Additional references
Engel, M.S. & Haas, F. 2007. Family-Group Names for Earwigs (Dermaptera). American Museum Novitates 3567: 1–20. DOI: 10.1206/0003-0082(2007)539[1:FNFED]2.0.CO;2 Paywall. hdl: 2246/5858 Open access. BHL. Reference page.
ICZN 2017. Opinion 2400 (Case 3522) – Palicinae Burr, 1910 (Dermaptera, Spongiphoridae): proposed emendation of spelling to Palexinae to remove homonymy with Palicidae Bouvier, 1898 (Crustacea, Decapoda) not granted. Bulletin of Zoological Nomenclature 67(3): 211–212. DOI: 10.21805/bzn.v74.030 Paywall. Biotaxa Open access. Reference page.
Links
Australian Faunal Directory
Anisolabididae is a family of earwigs, in the suborder Forficulina and the order Dermaptera. It is one of nine families in the suborder Forficulina, and contains thirty-eight genera spread across thirteen subfamilies.
Subfamilies
The family contains the following subfamilies:
Anisolabidinae (contains 25 genera, cited by both Srivastava and Chen & Ma.[1][2] Steinmann[3] in 1986, 1989, 1990, and 1993 classified the genera under the subfamilies Carcinophorinae and Gonolabiinae, which are synonyms of Anisolabidinae.[9] Other synonyms include Placolabidinae and Titanolabiinae. The genera in this subfamily are Aborolabis, Anisolabella, Anisolabis, Apolabis, Capralabis, Carcinophora, Epilabis, Epilandex, Euborellia, Flexiolabis, Foramenolabis, Gonolabis, Mongolabis, Placolabis, Gonolabina, Gonolabis, Heterolabis, Indolabis, Metalabis, Neolabis, Ornatolabis, Paraflexiolabis, Thekalabis, Titanolabis, and Zacheria)
Anophthalmolabiinae (contains one genus, Anophthalmolabis, cited by both Steinmann and Srivastava[1][3])
Antisolabiinae (contains one genus, Antisolabis, cited by both Steinmann and Srivastava[1][3])
Brachylabinae (contains three genera: Brachylabis, Ctenisolabis, Metisolabis. Ctenisolabis and Metisolabis were cited by both Steinmann and Srivastava,[1][3] while Brachylabis was cited by Steinmann, Srivastava, and Chen & Ma[1][2][3])
Idolopsalinae (contains one genus, Idolopsalis, cited by both Steinmann and Srivastava[1][3])
Isolabiinae (contains four genera: Africolabis, Geracodes, Isolabis, and Pterolabis, cited only by Steinmann[3])
Parisolabiinae (contains two genera, Parisolabis and Parisopsalis. They were cited by both Steinmann and Srivastava[1][3])
Platylabiinae (contains one genus, Platylabia, cited by Steinmann, Srivastava, and Chen & Ma[1][2][3])
Incertae sedis:
The genus †Toxolabis was described in 2014 from a single fossil male recovered from Burmese amber. The single species T. zigrasi matches that of Anisolabididae members. Due to the quality of the preservation, the describing authors were not able to be determine a more specific placement within the family.[10] Kotejalabis, Cretolabia and Cratoborellia are known from the Aptian aged Crato Formation of Brazil.
References
Srivastava Fauna of India Pt. 2
Chen & Ma 2004 Fauna Sinica
Steinmann 1986, 1989, 1990, 1993
"Anisolabididae - Wikispecies".
"Fauna Europaea".
"ITIS - Report: Carcinophoridae".
http://sn2000.taxonomy.nl/Taxonomicon/TaxonLinks.aspx?id=147033&syn=1[permanent dead link]
"Archived copy". 134.60.85.50:591. Archived from the original on 29 May 2011. Retrieved 22 May 2022.
Haas, Fabian (1996-07-18). "Dermaptera. Earwigs". The Tree of Life Web Project. Retrieved 2009-06-21.
Engel, MS; Grimaldi, D (2014). "New mid-Cretaceous earwigs in amber from Myanmar (Dermaptera)". Novitates Paleoentomologicae. 6: 1–16.
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