WoRMS source details

Hartman, Olga. (1936). New species of polychaetous annelids of the family Nereidae from California. Proceedings of the United States National Museum. 83(2994): 467-480.
50154
Hartman, Olga
1936
New species of polychaetous annelids of the family Nereidae from California
Proceedings of the United States National Museum
83(2994): 467-480
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb)
Available for editors  PDF available [request]
None. Begins: "Annelids of the family Nereidae from many sources have been used in this study. Collections that were made by many persons over many years and that have accumulated in the department of zoology of the University of California at Berkeley were especially valuable. My own collecting was very extensive for Moss Beach, San Mateo County, and less complete for other parts of California, including points between Mendocino County and Los Angeles County. In addition, several smaller recent collections furnished a few interesting species. Such are the collection made at Dillon Beach, Marin County, by Prof. O. L. Williams, of the College of the Pacific at Stockton; one made at Pacific Grove, Monterey County, by Dr. R. M. Eakin; and one made off southwestern Oregon by Prof. C. R. Monk, of Willamette University. Holotypes are deposited in the United States National Museum"
California quadrant
Systematics, Taxonomy
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
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Date
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by
2013-01-12 18:30:12Z
created
db_admin
2014-03-10 00:34:12Z
changed
2017-10-03 22:07:51Z
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2018-08-07 11:05:00Z
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Holotype USNM 20198, geounit Monterey Bay, identified as Nereis (Nereis) eucapitis Hartman, 1936
Holotype USNM 20201, geounit California, identified as Nereis (Nereis) neonigripes Hartman, 1936
Holotype USNM 20203, geounit Monterey Bay, identified as Nereis (Nereis) eakini Hartman, 1936
 Etymology

not explicitly stated, but the collector was Dr. R. M. Eakin [details]

 Etymology

Not stated. In the description the parapodial lobes are noted as conspicuously dark pigmented, thus presumably the ... [details]

 Habitat

specimens were "taken from the ambulacral groove of the starfish Patiria miniata". [details]

 Type locality

According to the USNM record lot #20198 comes from Moss Beach, [near] Monterey, (gazetteer 36.8133° -121.7903°), ... [details]

 Type locality

Point Fermin, California (fide Hartman, 1968, Atlas), 33.7046 -118.2940 (geolocator tool) [details]