WoRMS source details
Johnston, George. (1839). Miscellanea Zoologica. The British Nereides.[article 24] [Continued from vol. iii p. 295]. Annals of Natural History or Magazine of Zoology, Botany and Geology. (series 1) 4 (issue 24) [December 1839]: 224-232, plates VI-VII.
50561
Johnston, George
1839
Miscellanea Zoologica. The British Nereides.[article 24] [Continued from vol. iii p. 295]
Annals of Natural History or Magazine of Zoology, Botany and Geology
(series 1) 4 (issue 24) [December 1839]: 224-232, plates VI-VII
Publication
Annelidabase. Despite the title this article is not about Nereididae as defined now. Issue 24 is December 1839 (see p.217 at start of article 23)
[None]
British Islands
North Sea (and Channel)
North Sea (and Channel)
Systematics, Taxonomy
Date
action
by
2013-01-12 18:30:12Z
created
db_admin
Ioda [auctt.] accepted as Ioida Johnston, 1839 accepted as Syllis Lamarck, 1818 (original description)
Ioda macrophthalma [auctt.] accepted as Ioida macrophthalma Johnston, 1839 accepted as Syllis armillaris (O.F. Müller, 1776) (original description)
Ioida Johnston, 1839 accepted as Syllis Lamarck, 1818 (original description)
Ioida macrophthalma Johnston, 1839 accepted as Syllis armillaris (O.F. Müller, 1776) (original description)
Phyllodoce bilineata Johnston, 1839 accepted as Eulalia bilineata (Johnston, 1840) (original description)
Ioda macrophthalma [auctt.] accepted as Ioida macrophthalma Johnston, 1839 accepted as Syllis armillaris (O.F. Müller, 1776) (original description)
Ioida Johnston, 1839 accepted as Syllis Lamarck, 1818 (original description)
Ioida macrophthalma Johnston, 1839 accepted as Syllis armillaris (O.F. Müller, 1776) (original description)
Phyllodoce bilineata Johnston, 1839 accepted as Eulalia bilineata (Johnston, 1840) (original description)
Firth of Forth for Phyllodoce bilineata Johnston, 1839
Depth range
Not stated in the original description. Probably shallow water, intertidal to subtidal. [details]
Distribution
British coasts of the North Sea: Scotland (Firth of Forth); England (Berwick-upon-Tweed). [details]
Etymology
The generic name derives from the Greek adjective Ioeides, meaning 'blue or violet-coloured', and was given by ... [details]
Etymology
Not stated in the original description. The specific epithet bilineata (masculine: bilineatus) is a Latin adjective ... [details]
Type locality
Described with base on specimens from two localities in the North Sea: 1) ''Preston-pans'' (= Prestonpans), Firth ... [details]