Checklist of Strongylognathus species

The following species and subspecies belong to the genus Strongylognathus. Synonyms are listed under their senior names. For valid names only see Strongylognathus species and for distribution information see Strongylognathus species by Country.

A
afer Emery, 1884 (Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia)

• Strongylognathus huberi foreli Emery, 1924

alboini Finzi, 1924 (Italy, Slovenia, Switzerland)

alpinus Wheeler, W.M., 1909 (Switzerland)

arnoldii Radchenko, 1985 (Russian Federation)

C
caeciliae Forel, 1897 (Iberian Peninsula, Spain)

cheliferus Radchenko, 1985 (China, Russian Federation)

christophi Emery, 1889 (Kyrgyzstan, Russian Federation, Turkmenistan)

• Strongylognathus huberi ruzskyi Emery, 1909

D
destefanii Emery, 1915 (Italy)

• Strongylognathus emeryi Menozzi, 1921

• Strongylognathus huberi cecconii Emery, 1916

H
huberi Forel, 1874 (France, Iberian Peninsula, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland)

• Strongylognathus huberi gallica Bondroit, 1918

huberi dalmaticus Baroni Urbani, 1969 (Croatia, France, Greece, Italy, Portugal, Spain, Switzerland)

I
insularis Baroni Urbani, 1968 (Italy, Malta)

italicus Finzi, 1924 (Italy)

K
kabakovi Radchenko & Dubovikoff, 2011 (Afghanistan)

karawajewi Pisarski, 1966 (Armenia, China, Russian Federation, Turkmenistan, Ukraine)

kervillei Santschi, 1921 (Turkey)

koreanus Pisarski, 1966 (China, Democratic Peoples Republic of Korea, Japan, Republic of Korea)

kratochvili Silhavy, 1937 (Bulgaria, Czech Republic)

• Strongylognathus rehbinderi bulgaricus Pisarski, 1966

M
minutus Radchenko, 1991 (Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan)

P
palaestinensis Menozzi, 1933 (Israel)

pisarskii Poldi, 1994 (Italy)

potanini Radchenko, 1995 (China)

R
rehbinderi Forel, 1904 (Armenia, Georgia)

S
silvestrii Menozzi, 1936 (Greece)

T
testaceus (Schenck, 1852) (Andorra, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bulgaria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iberian Peninsula, Lithuania, Netherlands, Poland, Republic of Moldova, Romania, Russian Federation, Slovakia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkmenistan, Ukraine, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland)

• Myrmus emarginatus Schenck, 1853

• Strongylognathus diveri Donisthorpe, 1936

tylonus Wei, Xu, Z. & He, 2001 (China)