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  1. Mar 14, 2024 · Daddy longlegs have up to two functional eyes and at least one species has four hidden, underdeveloped ones. In this fluorescent microscope image of a Phalangium opilio embryo, the two working...

  2. Mar 19, 2024 · The evidence suggests P. opilio once had an eye on each side of its head, atop its frontmost pair of legs, as well as an additional pair of eyes that faced forward. Though the four vestigial eyes...

  3. P. opilio is a generalist predator and scavenger that feeds on soft-bodied animals found in crops, such as aphids, caterpillars, leafhoppers, beetle larvae, and mites. Sometimes it may also scavenge on hard-bodied animals, such as various arthropods, including other harvestmen .

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  5. The Phalangida (Opiliones) of New York, with special reference to the species of the Edmund Niles Huyck Preserve, Rensselaerville, New York. Rochester Academy of Science. Proceedings 9: 159–235.

  6. Aug 4, 2021 · Figure 1. The significance of Opiliones in evolutionary developmental biology. ( a) Consensus phylogeny of Chelicerata (based on [ 5 ]) and inferred WGD events in Xiphosura and Arachnopulmonata. ( b) Adult male P. opilio climbing on a twig using its prehensile tarsi. ( c) Detail of the distal subdivisions (tarsomeres) of the leg 2 tarsus.

    • Guilherme Gainett, Vanessa L. González, Jesús A. Ballesteros, Emily V. W. Setton, Caitlin M. Baker, ...
    • 2021
  7. Phalangium opilio. A species of Phalangium, Also known as Harvest Spider, Common Harvestman, Brown daddy-long-legs. The european harvestman (Phalangium opilio) is an eight-legged arachnid, but it is not a spider. They share the nickname " daddy longlegs" with the cellar spider (Pholcidae).

  8. 1. Summary 2. Phalangium opilio is "the most widespread species of harvestman in the world", occurring natively in Europe, and much of Asia, and having been introduced to North America, North Africa and New Zealand.

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