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WoRMS name details

Orbiniella jamesi Georgieva, Wiklund, Ramos, Neal, Glasby & Gunton, 2023

1661567  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1661567)

uncertain > taxon inquirendum (Not Orbiniella, classification awaiting reasignment fide Mica et al (2024))
Species
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
recent only
Georgieva, Magdalena N.; Wiklund, Helena; Ramos, Dino A.; Neal, Lenka; Glasby, Christopher J.; Gunton, Laetitia M. (2023). The annelid community of a natural deep-sea whale fall off eastern Australia. <em>Records of the Australian Museum.</em> 75(3): 167-213., available online at https://journals.australian.museum/georgieva-2023-rec-aust-mus-753-167213/
page(s): 192, figure 18; note: Whale skull & vertebrae off Byron Bay, NSW, Australia, beam trawl, start: 28.05°S 154.08°E, 999 m, end: 28.10°S 154.08°E, 1013 m [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 
Holotype  AM W.53705, geounit New South Wales  
Holotype AM W.53705, geounit New South Wales [details]
Note Whale skull & vertebrae off Byron Bay, NSW,...  
From editor or global species database
Type locality Whale skull & vertebrae off Byron Bay, NSW, Australia, beam trawl, start: 28.05°S 154.08°E, 999 m, end: 28.10°S 154.08°E, 1013 m [details]
Etymology Orbiniella jamesi is named for James Hayhurst, for his support of the work of M. Georgieva.  
Etymology Orbiniella jamesi is named for James Hayhurst, for his support of the work of M. Georgieva. [details]
Read, G.; Fauchald, K. (Ed.) (2024). World Polychaeta Database. Orbiniella jamesi Georgieva, Wiklund, Ramos, Neal, Glasby & Gunton, 2023. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1661567 on 2024-07-16
Date
action
by
2023-05-21 03:42:17Z
created
2024-06-22 08:54:12Z
changed

Creative Commons License The webpage text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License


original description Georgieva, Magdalena N.; Wiklund, Helena; Ramos, Dino A.; Neal, Lenka; Glasby, Christopher J.; Gunton, Laetitia M. (2023). The annelid community of a natural deep-sea whale fall off eastern Australia. <em>Records of the Australian Museum.</em> 75(3): 167-213., available online at https://journals.australian.museum/georgieva-2023-rec-aust-mus-753-167213/
page(s): 192, figure 18; note: Whale skull & vertebrae off Byron Bay, NSW, Australia, beam trawl, start: 28.05°S 154.08°E, 999 m, end: 28.10°S 154.08°E, 1013 m [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 

status source Meca, Miguel A.; Kongsrud, Jon Anders; Kongshavn, Katrine; Alvestad, Tom; Meißner, Karin; Budaeva, Nataliya. (2024). Diversity of Orbiniella (Orbiniidae, Annelida) in the North Atlantic and the Arctic. <em>ZooKeys.</em> 1205: 51-88., available online at https://zookeys.pensoft.net/article/120300/list/9/
page(s): 80; note: Meca et al report Orbiniella jamesi does not belong to Orbiniella due to the presence of branchiae, and also placed within the Scoloplos/Leitoscoloplos clade in a preliminary analysis of orbiniid phyl...  
Meca et al report Orbiniella jamesi does not belong to Orbiniella due to the presence of branchiae, and also placed within the Scoloplos/Leitoscoloplos clade in a preliminary analysis of orbiniid phylogeny based on mitochondrial genome and nuclear data.
 [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 
Holotype AM W.53705, geounit New South Wales [details]
From editor or global species database
Classification Authors (2023) state "We tentatively assign the new species to genus Orbiniella due to possession of a broadly conical prostomium, bi-annulate peristomium, poorly developed parapodia, lack of furcate chaetae, no obvious division of body into thorax and abdomen, and no dorsal shift of parapodia." There is also molecular data. Subsequently Meca et al (2024: 80) report that "Orbiniella jamesi does not belong to Orbiniella due to the presence of branchiae, and also placed within the Scoloplos/Leitoscoloplos clade in a preliminary analysis of orbiniid phylogeny based on mitochondrial genome and nuclear data. [details]

Etymology Orbiniella jamesi is named for James Hayhurst, for his support of the work of M. Georgieva. [details]

Type locality Whale skull & vertebrae off Byron Bay, NSW, Australia, beam trawl, start: 28.05°S 154.08°E, 999 m, end: 28.10°S 154.08°E, 1013 m [details]
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