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   » » Wiki: Caddidae
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Caddoidea superfamily of arachnids with a single family Caddidae, which now only contains 2 extant species. The family previously contained many more taxa under a previous wider concept, but the familial definition was narrowed after restudy.

They are part of the suborder . They have mostly a body length between one and three millimeters.


Distribution
Caddids are widely but discontinuously distributed. In the subfamily Caddinae, Caddo is found in eastern and with the . Other similar lineages have previously been grouped together ias a wider concept of Caddidae (After Shear, 1974). Notable some previously in a second subfamily Acropsopilioninae have since been restored to their own family Acropsopilionidae. These are now placed within the suborder , as originally established by Roewer, 1923. The lineage includes Acropsopilio from scattered localities in the , Australia and New Zealand. Also they include Austropsopilio from Chile, eastern Australia & Tasmania and with those from the latter locality being treated by some as . Also it now includes Caddella, which is endemic to southern South Africa.
Another genus Hesperopilio, with species from Australia and Chile, has also historically been included in a wider concept of Caddidae, remains in the Suborder , but has since been transferred to , although not clearly placed in any established family.

Under the previous wider concept of Caddidae, the complex pattern of biogeography suggested that separation occurred in several steps: during the (eastern North America and Japan); at the beginning or before the (South America and Australia), and during the time of (Africa and Australia). However, the diversification of lineages requires future re-interpretation for the updated taxonomic framework.


Name
The family name is derived from "", a indigenous culture, people and language.


Species
  • Banks, 1892
    • Caddo Banks, 1892 (eastern North America, Japan)
** Banks, 1892USA, Canada, Japan, Russia (Kuril Islands)
** Shear, 1974USA, Japan, South Korea (?)
** † Caddo dentipalpis (Koch & Berendt) (fossil: Baltic Amber)


Footnotes

Further reading
  • (eds.) (2007). Harvestmen - The Biology of Opiliones. Harvard University Press, USA.


External links
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