Results 191 to 200 of about 3,460 (235)
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Bodotria paraspinifera sp. nov. (Crustacea: Cumacea: Bodotriidae), a new Korean cumacean.
Zootaxa, 2020This study on Korean cumaceans is based on the specimens collected from Geomun Island in Korea. The one species of the Genus Bodotria (Bodotriidae) is identified as new species, Bodotria paraspinifera sp. nov., which is similar to B. spinifera Gamô, 1986
Sung-hyun Kim +2 more
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New Zealand Bodotriidae (Crustacea: Cumacea)
Zootaxa, 2013The cumacean fauna of New Zealandhas been little studied, and recent collections on the Chatham Rise and Challenger Plateau have yielded many new species and new genera of Cumacea. A recent manuscript on the New ZealandNannast-acidae (Gerken 2012) increased the described New Zealandfauna by 66%.
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1928
(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Molecular insights into Cumacean family relationships (Crustacea, Cumacea)
Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2004Cumaceans are a diverse order of small, benthic marine crustaceans. Phylogenetic hypotheses for the eight currently recognized cumacean families have not been formally proposed. However, based on external morphological traits and Linnean classification, a few conflicting hypotheses of relatedness have been proposed.
Pilar A, Haye +2 more
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Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 1959
A collection of sub-littoral cumaceans from the coasts of South Africa is described. Eleven species were present, of which two, Bodotria elevata and Iphinoe dayi, are new.
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A collection of sub-littoral cumaceans from the coasts of South Africa is described. Eleven species were present, of which two, Bodotria elevata and Iphinoe dayi, are new.
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1989
The order Cumacea belongs to the super-order Peracarida, subclass Malacostraca, class Crustacea, according to the classification of McLaughlin, 1980. The cumaceans are primarily marine bottom-dwelling burrowing crustaceans. They live on argillaceous sands, feed on detritus, and graze on sand grains or are filter feeders.
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The order Cumacea belongs to the super-order Peracarida, subclass Malacostraca, class Crustacea, according to the classification of McLaughlin, 1980. The cumaceans are primarily marine bottom-dwelling burrowing crustaceans. They live on argillaceous sands, feed on detritus, and graze on sand grains or are filter feeders.
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New Zealand Diastylidae and Gynodiastylidae (Crustacea: Cumacea)
Zootaxa, 2015Recent work in the collections at the New Zealand National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research collections in Wellington has yielded 14 new diastylid species in five genera, Colurostylis whitireia n. sp., Diastylis acanthoelachys n. sp., D. adaioacanthus n. sp., D. curtain n. sp., D. dasys n. sp., D. enodis n. sp., D. homoacanthus n.
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Zootaxa, 2019
In total 36 species were identified, from the abyssal of the Vema Fracture Zone in the tropical northern Atlantic and the Puerto Rico Trench, including ten new species. The new species are Chalarostylis erebos n. sp., Chalarostylis nyx n.
U. MÜHLENHARDT-SIEGEL
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In total 36 species were identified, from the abyssal of the Vema Fracture Zone in the tropical northern Atlantic and the Puerto Rico Trench, including ten new species. The new species are Chalarostylis erebos n. sp., Chalarostylis nyx n.
U. MÜHLENHARDT-SIEGEL
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Crustacea. IV : Cumacea und Schizopoda
1916(Uploaded by Plazi from the Biodiversity Heritage Library) No abstract provided.
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Distribution of Cumacea in the deep Atlantic
Deep Sea Research and Oceanographic Abstracts, 1972Abstract The cumacean crustaceans are an important faunal component of the deep-sea benthos. Using improved sampling methods, 202 species have been collected from bathyal and abyssal depths from four regions of the Atlantic and 117 of these species are probably new. Considerable regional endemism has been found.
Norman S. Jones, Howard L. Sanders
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