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Bishop, S. C. 1949. 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. Clingenpeel, L. W. and A. L. Edgar. 1966. Certain ecological aspects of Phalangium opilio (Arthropoda: Opiliones). Papers of the ...
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 .
- P. opilio
- Phalangium
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Mar 14, 2024 · March 14, 2024 at 11:00 am. A species of daddy longlegs has been hiding four extra eyes. While the newfound peepers never fully develop, the vestigial organs suggest that this arachnid lineage is...
Feb 1, 2002 · Although previously unreported in Kentucky, P. opilio has been found in a number of nearby states, including Ohio, Michigan, New York, Pennsylvania, Arkansas, Illinois, and Virginia ( Cokendolpher and Lee 1993, Clark et al. 1994 ).
- Blake L. Newton, Kenneth V. Yeargan
- 2002
A promising focal species for chelicerate evo-devo is the daddy-long-legs (harvestman) Phalangium opilio, a member of the order Opiliones. Phalangium opilio, breeds prolifically and is easily accessible in many parts of the world, as well as tractable in a laboratory setting.
- 10.1186/s12983-022-00454-z
- 2022
- Front Zool. 2022; 19: 11.
Aug 4, 2021 · As a first step in validating the use of P. opilio as an effective outgroup to Arachnopulmonata, we assembled and interrogated the genome of P. opilio, which revealed no evidence of systemic genome duplication events previously reported for arachnopulmonates or horseshoe crabs.
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.