WoRMS source details
Palmyra ocellata Johnston, 1827 accepted as Pholoe minuta (Fabricius, 1780) (original description)
Polynoe imbricata Johnston, 1827 (original description)
Polynoe lepidota Johnston, 1827 (original description)
Spio vulgaris Johnston, 1827 accepted as Malacoceros vulgaris (Johnston, 1827) (original description)
"The Spio vulgaris inhabits the sea shore, and the margins of our river [Tweed], a little below high-water mark" ... [details]
Northeastern Atlantic Ocean: North Sea (British Isles) [details]
"It is difficult to believe that so very common an animal, and one too of a considerable size, should have remained ... [details]
"The Spio vulgaris inhabits the seashore, and the margins of our river [Tweed], a little below high-watermark. It ... [details]
"The animal is used in this neighbourhood [of Berwick-upon-Tweed] as a bait to take the fry of the Coal-fish, — ... [details]
Care is needed attributing subsequent usages. Johnston (1827) used the spelling 'littoralis' with a double 'tt'. ... [details]
Berwick coast, Scotland. Johnston (1827) gives no location for Lumbricus littoralis, but the other taxa in the ... [details]
Sea shore and margins of River Tweed, Berwick-upon-Tweed (Northumberland), England, UK, North Sea (gazetteer ... [details]