Solely authored by Savigny, 1822. However, the Hartman catalogue (1959: 455) lists Clymene uranthus as "Savigny, ... [details]
Lamarck (1818) clearly took the species name from the Savigny MS, not published until 1822, as he cites the MS, but ... [details]
Usage confused. Grube (1850) awards Savigny the prior authorship of Grube's "Lycoridea" [sic], while himself at ... [details]
Savigny is apparently recombining a name, Terebella vagans Leach found "in Litteris", in which case W E Leach is ... [details]
Usually given as a Cuvier name, but the name was first published by Savigny (1822) as an invalid name in synonymy ... [details]
Although Savigny grouped Myriana in his Nereididae family, this is not much help today as Savigny included a ... [details]
N. ebranchiata was tentatively suggested to be in Oenone by Savigny (1822). He wrote "OBSERVATION. La Nereis ... [details]
Not stated, probably intertidal to shallow water. [details]
Original diagnosis by Savigny (1822: 46): "10.o Nereïs prismatica. OTH. FABR. n.o 285, et MÜLL. Prodr. n.o 2637. ... [details]
Original diagnosis by Savigny (1822: 46, footnote): "8.º Nereis flava. Oth. Fabr. loc. cit. n.º 282. Paroît ... [details]
Original diagnosis by Savigny as follows: "Paroissent avoir une longue trompe couronnée de tentacules; quatre ... [details]
Original diagnosis by Savigny (1822: 46): "9.o Neréis bifrons. OTH. FABR. n.o 286, et MÜLL. Prodr. n.o 2638. ... [details]
Savigny (1822) did not know where this worm came from, but it was used in Paris in medicinal treatments, in ... [details]
Previously recorded as Clitellio minutus Savigny, 1820, but there is no such original name. Instead Savigny was ... [details]
This name usage by Savigny is notable for the citation of the Amphitrite ventilabrum usage in Lamarck (as "Lam. ... [details]
Superfluous new name for Hirudo. It is unclear why Savigny uses it instead of the traditional Hirudo of Linnaeus, ... [details]
On p. 96 discussing Arenicola (Telethusae) Savigny has a remarkable footnote of interest because it indicates input ... [details]
Savigny (1822: 88) gives no clues as to the etymology of Amphictene. However, it is highly likely it is a compound ... [details]
Not stated, unknown. Maybe from one of the female historical characters of the Persian history named Amytis. [details]
Not stated. Aricia is a Greek town, a location holy to Diana (equated with Artemis), near Rome. However, in ... [details]
Savigny in translation p.112: "The name of the Leech among the Greeks. The generic names created recently, in which ... [details]
Not stated but evidently named after the Nile River. The Nile is close to the type locality of near Cairo, Egypt. [details]
Not stated, unknown. Maybe from the classic mythology (a deity like the Naiads, Nereids or Oceanids). [details]
Not stated in Savigny (1822: 45). The name appears to be a latinized form of the female Greek name Λυκαστη ... [details]
Not stated, unknown. Maybe from Polynices of the Greek mythology, son of Oedipus and Jocasta and brother of ... [details]
Savigny in a footnote justifying the genus name Sanguisuga makes reference to a passage in Pliny where he ... [details]
Not stated, but Savigny was well aware of the use of this leech in medical treatments. The name 'officinalis' is a ... [details]
Not stated. The specific epithet medusa refers probably to Medusa, the monster of the Greek mythology described as ... [details]
Not determined for certain by the editor (GBR), but treated as feminine by the genus author and most authors since. [details]
Feminine. While perhaps mistakenly thought to be a female given name, nevertheless Savigny seems to indicate he ... [details]
Feminine as Lycaste is a Greek female given name [details]
On the Fucus floating vaguely on the surface of the sea: "sur les fucus qui flottent vaguement à la surface de la ... [details]
Not clearly stated, but probably on or near the coast: "Espèce nouvelle des côtes dela mer Rouge" (Savigny, 1822: 85). [details]
Bdella Savigny, 1822, is a junior homonym to Bdella Latreille, 1795/6, a genus name in current use for ticks ... [details]
Savigny's name is clearly independent of the Sabella indica name published in Gmelin, 1791. There is no connection ... [details]
Recombination of original name Sabella indica Savigny which is an invalid primary junior homonym, therefore both ... [details]
An orphan name oddity without an included species proposed as genus name for Nereis caeca, and mentioned just as a ... [details]
Savigny evidently got the name 'Nereis pulsatoria' from prior usage in works of Montagu and Leach, but probably ... [details]
Blainville (1825: 443) in a long dictionary entry recombined many disparate polychaetes into his very broad concept ... [details]
The first appearance of this name seems to be in Savigny's 1822 annelid volumes of Description de l'Égypte (p.77). ... [details]
Lamarck (1801, p. 329) noted "Thalassema rupium. n. Lumbricus thalassema. Lin. Pall. Spicil. Zool. 10, p. 10, t. 1, ... [details]
Euphrosyne is the usual transliterated spelling of the name of the Greek Goddess, but Lamarck (1818) used ... [details]
Most Eurythoe alyconea usages will be as Eurythoe alyconia. Lamarck was first to publish the species as 'alyconea' ... [details]
Now known as distinct but previously placed by most as a synonym of Hirudo medicinalis, for example as late as in ... [details]
Fauchald dismisses the Linnaeus name of 'Nereis gigantea' as indeterminable (although it is referring to an ... [details]
Sabella flabellata was Savigny's new name for Tubularia penicillus sensu Fabricius (there are several T. ... [details]
Savigny (1822) gives no explanation of his 'Telethusae' family name for Arenicola species so we have no information ... [details]
Hermella Savigny 1822 on p.81 was for the species represented by the synonymy (as in Savigny) of Tubularia arenosa ... [details]
Lamarck and Savigny used Pleione, presumably arising first in the Savigny unpublished MS, instead of Amphinome, ... [details]
Savigny (1822) thought this species had not yet been described as distinct from Hirudo medicinalis ("... from which ... [details]
The combination A. capensis in Amphictene Savigny, 1822 has existed since the creation of Amphictene, but ... [details]
Lamarck (1818) gives a description only of the tube (attached to hard surfaces), and acknowledges the species name ... [details]
The species name included by Savigny (1822) for the new genus Enterion in the 'Description de l'Égypte ..' is only ... [details]
Created for Nephelis testacea, N. rutila, N. cinerea, all from the environs of Paris, France, [details]
Savigny bases his new combination on Amphitrite ventilabrum Gmelin, 1791, also including the pre-linnean name of ... [details]
In spite of being the type of a complex genus with numerous described taxa, the species was not redescribed since ... [details]
"côtes de l'océan" [of France], is here a reference to the Atlantic coast of France. The specimen was collected ... [details]
Unknown. Although Hartman's Catalogue (p.248) places Lycoris nubila as Red Sea, this appears to be very probably ... [details]
Locality unknown. Savigny writes "Espèce des mers d'Europe, communiqùée par MM. Leach et de Lamarck." He also ... [details]
England, Atlantic Ocean: "Petite espèce des côtes de l'Angleterre" (Savigny, 1822: 60). [details]
"les mers des Inde", collected by Péron, and thus probably from Australia [details]
Pondicherry, South East India. Savigny (1822) wrote "Espèce employée par les médecins de Pondichery, d'ou elle a ... [details]
Suez and surrounding waters, Gulf of Suez, Red Sea, Indian Ocean (gazetteer estimate 29.92°, 32.53°). [details]
Savigny (1822:89) includes a number of pectinariids as synonyms of Amphictene auricoma, including Pectinaria ... [details]