WoRMS source details
Stygobromus anastasiae Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010 (original description)
Stygobromus anastasiae Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010 (status source)
Stygobromus canadensis Holsinger, 1980 (additional source)
Stygobromus kazakhstanicus Kulkina, 1992 accepted as Palearcticarellus kazakhstanica (Kulkina, 1992) (additional source)
Stygobromus mikhaili Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010 accepted as Palearcticarellus mikhaili (Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010) (original description)
Stygobromus mikhaili Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010 accepted as Palearcticarellus mikhaili (Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010) (status source)
Stygobromus pusillus (Martynov, 1930) accepted as Palearcticarellus pusillus (Martynov, 1930) (redescription)
Synurella apscheronia Derzhavin, 1945 accepted as Stygobromus apscheronicus (Derzhavin, 1945) (status source)
East Palearctic region for Stygobromus mikhaili Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010
Holarctic for Stygobromus Cope, 1872
Irkutsk Oblast for Stygobromus anastasiae Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010
Irkutsk Oblast for Stygobromus anastasiae Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010
Kazakhstan for Stygobromus kazakhstanicus Kulkina, 1992
Lake Teletskoye for Stygobromus pusillus (Martynov, 1930)
Holotype IBSS 14/21sd, geounit Russia, identified as Stygobromus mikhaili Sidorov, Holsinger & Takhteev, 2010
Subterranean/Hypogean [details]
Subterranean/Hypogean [details]
Subterranean/Hypogean, although found in deep lake and surrounding creeks [details]
Named in honor of hydrobiologist Anastasia Galimzjanova (Department of Biological and Soil Sciences, Irkutsk State ... [details]
It is a pleasure to name this new species in honor of our colleague hydrobiologist Mikhail Chertoprud in the ... [details]
Drip pools, streams and phreatic water in caves, water wells, seeps and/or seepage springs (hypotelminorheic) and ... [details]
Springs; depth 3–30 cm, in substrate of anisomerous sand grains, stones, pebbles, breakstones and gravels; ... [details]
Hypotelminorheic (?); spring; depth of 5–7 cm in stones overgrown with moss [details]