WoRMS name details

Antinoe sarsi Kinberg in Malmgren, 1866

155279  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:155279)

 unaccepted (superseded original combination)
Species
Antinoe sarsii [auct.] · unaccepted (misspelling)
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
recent only
Malmgren, Anders Johan. (1865). Nordiska Hafs-Annulater. [part one of three]. <em>Öfversigt af Königlich Vetenskapsakademiens förhandlingar, Stockholm.</em> 22(1): 51-110, plates VIII-XV., available online at https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/32339323
page(s): 75-78, plate 9, figure 6; note: as Antinoe sarsi Kinberg, although it seems Kinberg never described it. [details]   
Type locality contained in West Europe  
type locality contained in West Europe [details]
Note Atlantic Ocean, western Europe  
From editor or global species database
Type locality Atlantic Ocean, western Europe [details]
Taxonomy Moved to different genus  
Taxonomy Moved to different genus [details]
Read, G.; Fauchald, K. (Ed.) (2024). World Polychaeta Database. Antinoe sarsi Kinberg in Malmgren, 1866. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=155279 on 2024-03-29
Date
action
by
2005-04-25 07:40:18Z
created
2007-01-22 09:31:04Z
changed
2008-03-26 11:36:43Z
changed
2021-06-10 03:00:31Z
changed

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


original description Malmgren, Anders Johan. (1865). Nordiska Hafs-Annulater. [part one of three]. <em>Öfversigt af Königlich Vetenskapsakademiens förhandlingar, Stockholm.</em> 22(1): 51-110, plates VIII-XV., available online at https://biodiversitylibrary.org/page/32339323
page(s): 75-78, plate 9, figure 6; note: as Antinoe sarsi Kinberg, although it seems Kinberg never described it. [details]   

additional source Fauchald, K. (1977). The polychaete worms, definitions and keys to the orders, families and genera. <em>Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County: Los Angeles, CA (USA), Science Series.</em> 28:1-188., available online at http://www.vliz.be/imisdocs/publications/123110.pdf
page(s): 60; note: copies the Hartman Catalogue (p.62) in giving the authorship as Kinberg in Malmgren, 1865 [details]   

additional source Hartmann-Schröder, G. (1996). Annelida, Borstenwürmer, Polychaeta [Annelida, bristleworms, Polychaeta]. <em>2nd revised ed. The fauna of Germany and adjacent seas with their characteristics and ecology, 58. Gustav Fischer: Jena, Germany. ISBN 3-437-35038-2.</em> 648 pp. (look up in IMIS[details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 

source of synonymy Annenkova, N. P. (1937). [Polychaete fauna of the northern part of the Japan Sea] (in Russian, with English translation of new species text only). <em>Issledovaniya fauny morei, Zoologicheskii Institut Akademii Nauk USSR Explorations des Mers de l'URSS.</em> 23: 139-216. [details]  Available for editors  PDF available [request] 
 
 Present  Present in aphia/obis/gbif/idigbio   Inaccurate  Introduced: alien  Containing type locality 
   

From editor or global species database
Authority The inclusion of Kinberg in the authorship is probably an honorary one. Malmgren (1866) records and describes this species as Antinoe sarsi Kinberg, although it seems that Kinberg never described it. It is not one of the species names he included when he created Antinoe. It seems likely to have been a museum label name that 'escaped' into the literature. It first appears in a work by S. Loven (1862: 468 in "Till fråsfan om Ishafsfaunans fordna utsträckning öfver en del af Nordens fastland.) who writes (in translation") "Among them is a Polynoe, housed in the Riks-Museum as Antinoe Särsi Kinberg. Magister Malmgren, as now processes the Annelids brought home by the Expedition to Spitsbergen, has found this species both at Spitsbergen, where she is very large and heavily educated [?], as in Ramfjord in Finmarken." This first date of 1862 appears in Augener (1928: 687) as the first usage of the name. However, it was evidently a nomen nudum in that work by Loven. The next usage is apparently the full description by Malmgren (1865). [details]

Specimen Swedish Museum of Natural History, Stockholm 2590-2598, 2611, 2615, 2617 [details]

Taxonomy Moved to different genus [details]

Type locality Atlantic Ocean, western Europe [details]