Amphiops mater Sharp, 1873

Amphiops mater Sharp, 1873: 62; Balfour-Browne 1939c: 304, figs. 9, 10b; Biswas & Mukhopadhyay 1995: 161; Jia 2014: 8, figs., 3A–E, 5G, H; Fikáček et al. 2015c: 37; Liu et al. 2021a: 48; Przewoźny 2022: 10; Deb et al. 2023: 24047; Shankar et al. 2024: 459.

Amphiops pedestris Sharp, 1890: 354; Biswas 2000: 102; Ghosh et al. 2000: 48; Khan & Ghosh 2001: 72; Mukhopadhyay & Sengupta 2004: 456; Ghosh & Hegde 2013a: 64; Das et al. 2014: 458; Ghosh & Mitra 2014: 67; Ghosh & Das 2016: 436; Devi et al. 2017: 10; Ghosh et al. 2011: 10; Ghosh et al. 2015a: 107; Ghosh et al. 2016: 23; Ghosh et al. 2018b: 28; Ghosh et al. 2021: 615; Anamika et al. 2021: 185; Ghosh & Gupta 2022: 117; Sonali et al. 2022: 341.

Amphiops mater ssp. pedestris: Balfour-Browne 1939c: 304; Hansen 1999a: 106; Ghosh et al. 2023: 161.

Type locality: Japan, Honshu (Hyogo), Kyushu (Nagasaki) (Jia 2014).

Distribution in India: Andaman and Nicobar Islands (Great Nicobar Island), Andhra Pradesh, Bihar, Himachal Pradesh (Kangra, Sirmour, Dharamshala, Renuka Wildlife Sanctuary), Manipur, Maharashtra (Pune), Odisha (Chilika Lake), Tamil Nadu, Tripura (Rudrasagar, Lambuchara, Amarpur), Puducherry (Karaikal), and West Bengal (Alipurduar, Kolkata, Sunderban Biosphere Reserve, Sagar Island, Bhibhutibhusan Wildlife Sanctuary, Buxa Tiger Reserve).

Global distribution: Cambodia, China, India, Indonesia, Japan, Nepal, South Korea, Sri Lanka, Taiwan, and Vietnam.