Stephanie Frances Loria
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Stephanie F. Loria
- Scorpion Systematics Research Group, Division of Invertebrate Zoology; Richard Gilder Graduate School, American Museum of Natural History.
Taxon names authored
(List may be incomplete)
Publications
[edit](List may be incomplete)
2020
[edit]- Prendini, L. & Loria, S.F. 2020. Systematic Revision of the Asian Forest Scorpions (Heterometrinae Simon, 1879), Revised Suprageneric Classification of Scorpionidae Latreille, 1802, and Revalidation of Rugodentidae Bastawade et al., 2005. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 442(1): 1–480. DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.442.1.1 Reference page.
- Seiter, M., Reyes Lerma, A.C., Král, J., Sember, A., Divišová, K., Palacios Vargas, J.G., Colmenares, P.A., Loria, S.F. & Prendini, L. 2020. Cryptic diversity in the whip spider genus Paraphrynus (Amblypygi: Phrynidae): integrating morphology, karyotype and DNA. Arthropod Systematics & Phylogeny 78(2): 265-285. Reference page.
2021
[edit]- Prendini, L., Ehrenthal, V.L. & Loria, S.F. 2021. Systematics of the Relictual Asian Scorpion Family Pseudochactidae Gromov, 1998, with a Review of Cavernicolous, Troglobitic, and Troglomorphic Scorpions. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History 453(1): 1-149. Reference page.
2025
[edit]- Loria, S.F., Frank, S.C., Dupérré, N., Smith, Helen M., Jones, B., Buzatto, B.A. & Harms, D. 2025. The world’s most venomous spider is a species complex: systematics of the Sydney funnel-web spider (Atracidae: Atrax robustus). BMC Ecology and Evolution: 25: 7. DOI: doi.org/10.1186/s12862-024-02332-0.
.Reference page.