I don't think that such a thing exist, but if exist, wouldn't be complete.Is there a list of tarantulas per country?
There are 199 species of tarantulas officially described in Brazil. Although there is no listing of tarantula species by all countries that I am aware of, I can provide a list of all described tarantula species and what country they occur in. Or if you have a specific country in mind, I can provide that listing too.Hi,
maybe someone know how many tarantula species are in Brazil?
Is there a list of tarantulas per country?
Thanks
I'd like that data, if you would be so kind. When you say described, are you referring to T's that are formally described (ex Poecilotheria rufilata) or does it include informally described species as well (ex Phormingochilus sp Sabah Blue)?There are 199 species of tarantulas officially described in Brazil. Although there is no listing of tarantula species by all countries that I am aware of, I can provide a list of all described tarantula species and what country they occur in. Or if you have a specific country in mind, I can provide that listing too.
PM sent with the list and the answer to your question.I'd like that data, if you would be so kind. When you say described, are you referring to T's that are formally described (ex Poecilotheria rufilata) or does it include informally described species as well (ex Phormingochilus sp Sabah Blue)?
Thanks,
--Matt
Please be so kind and send me also the list. I am the threadstarter. Thanks.PM sent with the list and the answer to your question.
PM sent with the list.Please be so kind and send me also the list. I am the threadstarter. Thanks.
Great. Many thanksIf you're curious about the described tarantula species in Brazil (or any country) you can search for the county name on this page:
https://wsc.nmbe.ch/family/100/Theraphosidae
There are 199 species of tarantulas officially described in Brazil. Although there is no listing of tarantula species by all countries that I am aware of, I can provide a list of all described tarantula species and what country they occur in. Or if you have a specific country in mind, I can provide that listing too.
Sure. PM sent.I know this is older but can I get this list as well?
Same same. I would LOVE that list. I’m an organization freak and having a list would soothe my soul. Please if you would be so kind I would be indebted to you for eternity!Sure. PM sent.
Jeez, maybe we should just post the list lol. @AphonopelmaTX, I'll send him the copy you sent me.Same same. I would LOVE that list. I’m an organization freak and having a list would soothe my soul. Please if you would be so kind I would be indebted to you for eternity!
Thanks for sending the list to YoshiDavid. The primary reason I never made the list available on this site for everyone to download is because I was, and still not, sure if it violates copyright rules of this site and/or of the World Spider Catalog. The data itself came from the World Spider Catalog, but I put the data in my own relational database so I could query it using SQL. Since the source of the data was the World Spider Catalog, but formatted differently, I'm not sure if I would be violating any copyright rules or laws by making species lists available to the general internet public. I would rather play it safe and not do so.Jeez, maybe we should just post the list lol. @AphonopelmaTX, I'll send him the copy you sent me.
I think we're good from the WSC perspective. They offer a .csv download with the same information under a Creative Commons license (we just need to list the WSC as the source and link the license). I'm guessing you used the API to pull to your table? Or did you use the .csv or scrape it yourself? Unfortunately, I can't answer from AB's perspective. @Arachnopets, any insight?Thanks for sending the list to YoshiDavid. The primary reason I never made the list available on this site for everyone to download is because I was, and still not, sure if it violates copyright rules of this site and/or of the World Spider Catalog. The data itself came from the World Spider Catalog, but I put the data in my own relational database so I could query it using SQL. Since the source of the data was the World Spider Catalog, but formatted differently, I'm not sure if I would be violating any copyright rules or laws by making species lists available to the general internet public. I would rather play it safe and not do so.
I will look into the matter outside of a public discussion forum. If you want technical details where I got the data, and how I setup my database, feel free to PM me.I think we're good from the WSC perspective. They offer a .csv download with the same information under a Creative Commons license (we just need to list the WSC as the source and link the license). I'm guessing you used the API to pull to your table? Or did you use the .csv or scrape it yourself? Unfortunately, I can't answer from AB's perspective. @Arachnopets, any insight?