Pycnogonum anovigerum Clark, 1956
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Family:  Pycnogonidae ()
Max. size: 
Environment:  benthic; marine
Distribution:  Southwest Peninsula: New Zealand.
Diagnosis:  Trunk ovoid with very short lateral processes. Trunk with three low dorsomedian bulges. Proboscis a plain, slightly inflated cylinder tapering distally to small mouth area. Abdomen short, laterally inflated. Ovigers entirely lacking in both sexes. Legs very robust, coxae shorter than their diameters, femur with proximoventral bulge and dorsodistal knob and bulge. Second tibia only slightly longer than the width. Tarsus triangular, with few sole spines. Propodus well-curved, wider at base than distally, with only distal sole spines, claw very robust, about 0.6 of propodal length. Without auxiliary claws. It cannot be predicted with any certainty whether or not this species has male ovigers, but if not, it joins the other species in this genus which have auxiliary claws, however small, and these must serve to separate these two otherwise similar members of the New Zealand fauna (Ref. 9).
Biology: 
IUCN Red List Status: Not Evaluated (N.E.) Ref. 123251)
Threat to humans: 
Country info:   
 

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