Eupnoi

Guides

  • Caddoidea

    Caddoidea is a small superfamily of harvestmen (Opiliones) within the suborder Eupnoi, established by Nathan Banks in 1893. It contains two families: Caddidae and Acropsopilionidae. Members are characterized by distinctive morphological features including relatively long legs and compact bodies. The group has a disjunct distribution with representatives in North America, eastern Asia, and Australia. Caddoidea represents one of the more specialized lineages within the Dyspnoi-Eupnoi clade of long-legged harvestmen.

  • Hadrobunus grandis

    Hadrobunus grandis is a harvestman (Opiliones) species found in the eastern and central United States. Adults are active in early summer. The species was first described by Thomas Say in 1821. It belongs to the family Sclerosomatidae, a diverse group of long-legged arachnids commonly encountered in temperate North American forests and woodlands.

  • Phalangiidae

    Phalangiid Harvestmen, Harvestmen

    A family of harvestmen (Opiliones: Eupnoi) containing approximately 380 described species. The family includes the widespread and well-studied Phalangium opilio, one of the most recognizable harvestmen in temperate regions. Members are characterized by long, slender legs and a fused body lacking the narrow waist seen in spiders. The family has a primarily Holarctic distribution with some representation in Africa and other regions.

  • Phalangioidea

    harvestmen

    Phalangioidea is a superfamily of harvestmen (order Opiliones) within the suborder Eupnoi, comprising five families and over 1,500 species. Members are characterized by relatively long legs, fused body regions (cephalothorax and abdomen not separated by a pedicel), and the absence of venom glands and silk production. The superfamily includes the common long-legged harvestmen frequently encountered in temperate regions. Phalangioidea is distinct from the similarly named Phalangodoidea, a superfamily within the suborder Laniatores.

  • Sclerosomatidae

    Sclerosomatid Harvestmen

    Sclerosomatidae is a large family of harvestmen (Opiliones) comprising approximately 1,300 described species. The family is characterized by a hardened body structure, reflected in its name derived from Greek skleros ('hard') and soma ('body'). Members exhibit the classic 'daddy long legs' morphology with small, rounded bodies and long, slender legs. The family includes several subfamilies—Gagrellinae, Gyantinae, Leiobuninae, and Sclerosomatinae—distributed across diverse habitats worldwide. Some species display iridescent metallic coloration, particularly in tropical lineages. A former subfamily has been removed to form the separate family Globipedidae.