Intertidal and barely subtidal sand [details]
Subtidal sediments, always with a considerable amount of silt and clay, 0.5-21 m depth. [details]
Subtidal, generally coarse sand, 7-39 m depth. [details]
Intertidal (2 stations) and subtidal, generally shelly, sand, down to 15 m depth. [details]
Subtidal shelly sand and gravel, 3-4 m depth. [details]
Intertidal and subtidal sands, often with lots of organic material, down to at least 6 m depth [details]
Subtidal fine to coarse sediments, 3-14 m depth. [details]
Intertidal and subtidal sediments, to at least 4 m depth. [details]
Lower intertidal and subtidal sands, down to 15 m depth. [details]
Subtidal, fine to coarse sands, 0.5-3 m depth. [details]
Intertidal and subtidal sands, down to 2 m depth [details]
Various kinds of subtidal sand, depth 0.5- 12 m [details]
Lower intertidal and subtidal sands, down to at least 12 m depth [details]
Intertidal, coarse sands [details]
Intertidal and subtidal sands, to at least 15 m depth. [details]
subdtidal mud and muddy sand, 4.5-12.5m depth [details]
Known only from Hong Kong Island, southern China [details]
Southern China (new record), northern Sea of Japan, and Belize [details]
Southern China, Great Barrier Reef, and Ascension Island. [details]
Caribbean area, Pacific coast of Mexico, Galapagos, Southern China, Saudi Arabia and France [details]
Bermuda, Barbados, Puerto Rico, Belize (Erseus, in prep.), and southern China (new record). [details]
Named for the city of Hong Kong; G. hongkongensis is by far.the commonest species of Grania in the area investigated [details]
Only known from the type locality: Mirs Bay, Crooked Island, Hong Kong (New Territories). [details]
Only known from the type locality: Mirs Bay, Crooked Island, Hong Kong (New Territories). [details]
Great Barrier Reef (Australia) and southern China. [details]
Known only from the type locality in southern China [details]
Known only from Tolo Harbour, southern China [details]
Known only from the type locality in southern China [details]
Southern China (new record), Great Barrier Reef and Saudi Arabia, thus probably widely distributed in the Indo-Pacific [details]
Southern China and the Great Barrier Reef [details]
Southern China (new record) and Virginia, E coast of USA [details]
Southern China (new record) and Great Barrier Reef [details]
Great Barrier Reef (Australia), and southern China [details]
Southern China (new record), British Columbia, Nevis Island (Leeward Islands, Caribbean). [details]
Denmark, eastern USA, Pacific Canada, Brazil, South Africa, India and southern China [details]
Widely distributed in Europe, North America, South America (?; = Wapsa evelinae), Africa, Asia. [details]
Paranais litoralis is probably cosmopolitan, being recorded from most continents and from various latitudes [details]
Known only from the area of the type locality, southern China. [details]
Southern China (new record), India, Saudi Arabia, Bermuda, Florida, French Guyana [details]
Black and Mediterranean Seas, Caribbean area, Saudi Arabia and southern China [details]
Southern China (new record) and southern (subtropical) Japan [details]
from soft mud to coarse sand, generally in brackish water. [details]
Intertidal, brackish water, very coarse sediment [details]
Shallow subtidal and lower intertidal mud (and sand?). [details]
Intertidal coarse sand, and subtidal shelly sand [details]
Salt or brackish water, sometimes inland. Intertidal and subtidal, mud and sand. [details]
Marine, brackish and probably also freshwater habitats on beaches and in estuaries. In sand; often sand containing ... [details]
Estuarine or marine intertidal, generally coarse sand [details]
Brackish water (new record) and freshwater. Soft sediments. [details]
Subtidal, often brackish water, more or less muddy sediments [details]
The species is named for Dr Ray Gibson (Liverpool.Polytechnic, Liverpool) who collected the sample at Ting Kok [details]
The species is named for the type locality, with is just below the dam of the Tai Tam Reservoir on Hong Kong Island. [details]
The species epithet cavus is Latin for "hollow, excavated" and refers to the nature of the large copulatory sacs. [details]
The specific epithet inermis is Latin for "unarmed", which here alludes to the species' lack of a stylet in the ... [details]
Heronidrilus hutchingsae is named for Dr Pat Hutchings, Australian Museum, Sydney, who very kindly collected the ... [details]
This species' systematic position is somewhat enigmatic, hence the species epithet. [details]
The specific epithet biforis is Latin meaning ''with two doors'' or "openings"; this species has only two, not the ... [details]
The species epithet fratemus is Latin for "brotherly", "belonging to relation or kinsman", and it refers to the ... [details]
Named for Mr Duncan Mclnnes, Hong Kong, who very kindly collected the sample containing the holotype [details]
This species is named for Dr Kathryn A. Coates (Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada) [details]