The Scorpion genus Scorpiops
is a wide ranging and highly specious group of medium-sized, generally brown
Scorpions. There are currently about a dozen species known from China, all of
which are found in Tibet.
In a paper published in the journal ZooKeys on 8 April 2015, Shijin
Yin of the College of pharmacy at South Central University for Nationalities, Yunfeng
Zhang of the Department of Life Science at Tangshan Normal University, Zhaohui
Pan of the Institute of Plateau Ecology at the Agriculture and Animal Husbandry
College of Tibet University, Shaobin Li of the College of Life Sciences at
Yangtze University and Zhiyong Di of the School of Life Sciences at the
University of Science and Technology of China describe a new species of Scorpiops from Llasa in Tibet.
The new species is named Scorpiops ingens,
which ‘refers to the size of the morphology’ of the species. It is described
from four specimens, an adult male and female, an immature female and a
juvenile male. The adult male is 74.6 mm in length, the female 75.9 mm (large
for the genus). All the specimens are yellowish brown in colour.
Scorpiops ingens, male specimen in (1) dorsal and (2) lateral views, female specimen
in (3) dorsal and (4) lateral views. Yin et
al. (2015).
See also…
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Iberia to Russia, as well as North Africa and southwest Asia, and is
therefore one of the best studied Scorpion genuses, with eighteen
described species grouped into four subgenera, and numerous subspecies.
Despite this it is thought that there is still much to be learned about
its taxonomy, and that...
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