gifs of various pseudoscorpions

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Japan

seen from Spain
seen from Italy

seen from Spain
seen from Spain
seen from Malaysia

seen from Germany

seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Poland
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United Kingdom

seen from Maldives
seen from China
gifs of various pseudoscorpions
Round 3 - Arachnida - Pseudoscorpiones
(Sources - 1, 2, 3, 4)
Order: Pseudoscorpiones
Common Name: “pseudoscorpions”, “false scorpions”, “book scorpions”
Families: 25 - Atemnidae, Withiidae, Cheliferidae, Chernetidae, Sternophoridae, Pseudochiridiidae, Cheiridiidae, Larcidae, Garypinidae, Olpiidae, Menthidae, Garypidae, Hesperolpiidae, Geogarypidae, Neobisiidae, Gymnobisiidae, Parahyidae, Syarinidae, Hyidae, Bochicidae, Ideoroncidae, Feaellidae, Pseudogarypidae, Chthoniidae, and Pseudotyrannochthoniidae
Anatomy: flat, pear-shaped body with a 12-segmented abdomen that is short and rounded at the rear, with no telson; two very long pedipalps with palpal chelae (“pincers”) which strongly resemble those found on a scorpion; may have two, four, or no eyes; members of the clade Iocheirata are venomous, with a venom gland and duct usually located in the mobile finger of the chelae
Diet: smaller invertebrates
Habitat: worldwide, but are most dense and diverse in the tropics and subtropics; can be found under tree bark, in leaf and pine litter, in soil, in tree hollows, under stones, in caves, at the seashore in the intertidal zone, and within fractured rocks
Evolved in: Devonian
Do you have a favorite in Pseudoscorpiones?
One or more of my favorite animals is in Pseudoscorpiones
I love at least one or more of these animals
I like at least one or more of these animals
I am neutral about all of these animals
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Propaganda under the cut:
looking under bark of dead wood when it can't be replaced is usually habitat destruction and is a personal big no-no. but since firewood's going to be burned regardless, peeling back bark and looking underneath lets me see some pseudoscorpions!!!!!!! (and lets me transfer them to some wood that's not going to be burned or put their wood aside)
all the pseudoscorpions i find around here are unreasonably tiny Chthonius, so this somewhat bigger and shinier one (possibly Neobisium sp.) really stood out. it was nice to be able to watch one scuttle around without having to squint, a surprisingly fun activity considering it's basically akin to watching a very tiny roomba with a dying battery
(January 25th, 2025)
Ephippiochthonius spp.
A genus of psuedoscorpions found worldwide.
image by Brian Wright
Pseudoscorpiones sp.
Observed by talibzuo, CC BY-NC
Day 113: Book scorpion, again
Concept for a larger piece I'm working on.
Convincing myself that a concept sketch DOES count as a daily bug so I can take the time to work on stuff that takes longer than one (1) day's worth of drawing to finish....
Been a while since I got to see one of these critters.