B. tuberculatus is the most studied and well known of the three. The other two, B. duricorius and B. decipiens, are only known from females found by Eugène Simon in 1880[4] and Octavius Pickard-Cambridge in 1899,[5] respectively. In his 2016 publication in the Indian Journal of Arachnology, Pekka T. Lehtinen commented that this genus and its close relatives, including Corynethrix and possibly Boliscodes, need a taxonomic revision with the help of molecular analysis and that the absence of male specimens in two of the three species may make this difficult.[6]
^Benjamin, S. P.; Ranasinghe, U. G. S. L. (2019). "Redescription of Boliscus decipiens, with a new synonym in Boliscus tuberculatus (Araneae: Thomisidae)". Arachnology. 18 (2): 129. doi:10.13156/arac.2018.18.2.129. S2CID202727911.
^Thorell, T. (1891). "Spindlar från Nikobarerna och andra delar af södra Asien". Kongliga Svenska Vetenskaps-Akademiens Handlingar (in Swedish). 24 (2): 1–149.
^Simon, E. (1880). "Matériaux pour servir à une faun arachnologique de la Nouvelle Calédonie". Annales de la Société Entomologique de Belgique (in French). 23: 164–175.
^Pickard-Cambridge, O. (1899). "On some new species of exotic Araneidea". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. 67 (2): 518–532. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1899.tb06872.x.
^Lehtinen, P. T. (2016). "Significance of oriental taxa in phylogeny of crab spiders (Thomisidae s.lat. and Stiphropodidae)". Indian Journal of Arachnology. 5: 163–165.