WoRMS taxon details
Studeria Duncan, 1889
411318 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:411318)
accepted
Genus
Catopygus elegans Laube, 1869 † accepted as Studeria elegans (Laube, 1869) † (type by monotypy)
Hypselolampas H.L. Clark, 1917 · unaccepted (subjective junior synonym)
Pliolampas (Tristomanthus) Bittner, 1892 † · unaccepted (subjective junior synonym)
Tristomanthus Bittner, 1892 † · unaccepted (subjective junior synonym)
- Species Studeria recens (A. Agassiz, 1869)
- Species Studeria loveni (Studer, 1880) accepted as Tropholampas loveni (Studer, 1880) (transferred to Tropholampas)
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
recent + fossil
Not documented
Note Lambert (1907: p. 96) and Mortensen (1948: p....
Type species Lambert (1907: p. 96) and Mortensen (1948: p. 233) regarded Catopygus recens A. Agassiz, 1879 as type species of Studeria. Fact is, however, that Catopygus elegans Laube, 1869 is the only originally included species in the description of Studeria and following ICZN regulations thus has to be regarded as type species by monotypy. [details]
Kroh, A.; Mooi, R. (2024). World Echinoidea Database. Studeria Duncan, 1889. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=411318 on 2024-06-17
Date
action
by
2009-08-12 07:50:07Z
created
db_admin
The webpage text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License
From editor or global species database
Type species Lambert (1907: p. 96) and Mortensen (1948: p. 233) regarded Catopygus recens A. Agassiz, 1879 as type species of Studeria. Fact is, however, that Catopygus elegans Laube, 1869 is the only originally included species in the description of Studeria and following ICZN regulations thus has to be regarded as type species by monotypy. [details]
To Echinoid Directory
To Echinoid Directory (from synonym Hypselolampas H.L. Clark, 1917)
To Echinoid Directory (from synonym Tristomanthus Bittner, 1892 †)
To Echinoid Directory (from synonym Hypselolampas H.L. Clark, 1917)
To Echinoid Directory (from synonym Tristomanthus Bittner, 1892 †)