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Moore, J.P. (1903). Polychaeta from the coastal slope of Japan and from Kamchatka and Bering Sea. Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia. 55: 401-490, plates XXIII-XXVII.
51110
Moore, J.P.
1903
Polychaeta from the coastal slope of Japan and from Kamchatka and Bering Sea
Proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia
55: 401-490, plates XXIII-XXVII
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb)

     Hitherto our knowledge of Japanese Polychaeta has been limited to collections made in the littoral zone at several points along the southeastern coast between Yokohama and Nagasaki and ably described in three papers by v. Marenzeller, a few species from the Japan Sea described by Grube and McIntosh, and to the results of about half a dozen dredge and trawl hauls made by the "Challenger" at points off Japan, which have been recorded by McIntosh.
     At the close of an extended cruise in the South Pacific Ocean, the United States Fish Commission steamer "Albatross" spent the month of May and part of June, 1900, in dredging and trawling along the continental slope of Japan. During this cruise the vessel was in command of Captain J.F. Moser, U.S.N., with Dr. H.F. Moore as naturalist, to whom, and to Dr. H.M. Smith, of the Fish Commission, I owe the pleasure of studying the rich and interesting collection of Polychaeta taken.
     During May a line of about seventy dredging stations was run along the coast of Nippon or Hanshu from Yokohama westward about 200 miles, through Sagami and Suruga Bays and the Totomi Sea. These stations were mostly along the steep slope on the inner border of the Black Current, and about or within the 100-fathom line, though the trawl was sometimes sent down to much greater depths. In early June, ten additional stations were established along the coast of northern Nippon, beginning at the lower end of Sendai Bay and extending for about 120 miles northward, entirely within the 100-fathom line. Later in June several dredgings were made in the shallow waters and muddy bottoms off Kamchatka, and others north of the Aleutian Islands in the southern portion of Bering Sea. The details of location, depth, character of bottom, etc., will be found in a list of dredging records of the "Albatross" compiled by Mr. C.H. Townsend, and pubhshed in the Report of the U.S. Fish Commission for 1900. In this paper it has been thought necessary to give only the depth and general locality, together with a list of the station numbers at which each species was taken.
     All of the species contained in the collection have been determined and, with the exception of the families Sabellidae and Serpulidae and several species of other families which have been reserved for further study and comparison with material not now available, are recorded in the following list. A large number of species, either new or hitherto unreported from that region, are added to the Japanese fauna. One of the surprises of this study has been the very small number of Marenzeller's species which were taken by the "Albatross." Of the species previously known most of them belong to the circumboreal fauna, several were dredged by the "Challenger" at points off Japan, and the others have been recorded from various more or less distant parts of the world. As Marenzeller has in preparation an account of the geographical relations of the Japanese Polychaeta, nothing more need be said on this subject. The general results remind one of those attained by Verrill along the Gulf Stream slope of North America.
Boreal western Pacific
Japan
Kamchatka Peninsula
Systematics, Taxonomy
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2013-01-12 18:30:12Z
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2013-12-06 19:48:12Z
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Loimia arborea Moore, 1903 (original description)
 Depth range

63-75 fathoms (= 115-137 m). [details]

 Description

Original description by Moore (1903: 478): "All of the specimens of Terebellides taken in Sagami Bay differ from ... [details]

 Distribution

NW Pacific Ocean: Japan (Suruga Bay). [details]

 Distribution

Pacific Ocean: Sagami Bay (Honshu Island, Japan). [details]

 Etymology

The specific epithet pusilla (masculine: pusillus), is a Latin adjective meaning 'very little' or 'very small', and ... [details]

 Etymology

Not stated in the original description. The subspecific epithet japonica refers to the type locality of the ... [details]

 Habitat

Volcanic sand and ash and gravel, at shelf depths. [details]

 Habitat

Volcanic sand and ash and gravel, at shelf depths.  [details]

 Habitat

Stones, volcanic ash and volcanic sand, fine sand, and mud, at shelf to slope depths. [details]

 Homonymy

Nereis pusilla Moore, 1903 is a junior primary homonym of Nereis pusilla O.F. Müller, 1776, and was replaced by ... [details]

 Syntype

Syntypes deposited at: Smithsonian Institution, Washington, USA (USNM 15741); Academy of Natural Sciences, ... [details]

 Type locality

Ose Zaki, Suruga Bay, Honshu Island, Japan, Pacific Ocean (gazetteer estimate 35.033º, 138.783º), 115-137 m, ... [details]

 Type locality

Bowers Bank, NE of Aleutian Islands, Bering Sea, 54º32´N 178º 31´E, 155 m, Albatross Stn 3784 [details]

 Type locality

Ose Zaki, Suruga Bay, Honshu Island, Japan, Pacific Ocean (gazetteer estimate 35.033º, 138.783º), 115-137 m, ... [details]

 Type locality

Tsuragi Saki Light, S.80d, W. 4.3 M, Sagami Bay, Honshu Island, Japan, Pacific Ocean (gazetteer estimate 35.25°, ... [details]

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