WoRMS taxon details
Clavadoce Hartman, 1936
324884 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:324884)
accepted
Genus
Clavadoce splendida Hartman, 1936 (type by original designation)
Cirrodoce Hartman & Fauchald, 1971 · unaccepted (subjective synonym)
Eulalia (Clavadoce) Hartman, 1936 · unaccepted (superseded subsequent combination)
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
recent only
Hartman, Olga. (1936). A review of the Phyllodocidae (Annelida Polychaeta) of the coast of California, with descriptions of nine new species. <em>University of California Publications in Zoology.</em> 41(10): 117-132.
page(s): 123 [details] Available for editors [request]
page(s): 123 [details] Available for editors [request]
Etymology Not stated. The name Clavadoce is composed by the Latin noun clava, meaning 'club', and, apparently, the ending of the name...
Etymology Not stated. The name Clavadoce is composed by the Latin noun clava, meaning 'club', and, apparently, the ending of the name of the type genus of the family Phyllodocidae, Phyllodoce Lamarck, 1818 (a water nymph in Greek mythology). It refers presumably to the shape of the antennae and tentacular cirri of the new phyllodocid genus, which are described as being "clavate instead of filiform" (Hartman, 1936: 123). The word doce could also be used as a combining form of Greek origin, meaning 'to seem'. [details]
Read, G.; Fauchald, K. (Ed.) (2024). World Polychaeta Database. Clavadoce Hartman, 1936. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=324884 on 2024-09-25
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original description
Hartman, Olga. (1936). A review of the Phyllodocidae (Annelida Polychaeta) of the coast of California, with descriptions of nine new species. <em>University of California Publications in Zoology.</em> 41(10): 117-132.
page(s): 123 [details] Available for editors [request]
original description (of Cirrodoce Hartman & Fauchald, 1971) Hartman, O.; Fauchald, K. (1971). Deep-water benthic polychaetous annelids off New England to Bermuda and other North Atlantic Areas. Part II. <em>Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology.</em> 6: 1-327., available online at http://hdl.handle.net/10088/3458
page(s): 39-40 [details]
page(s): 123 [details] Available for editors [request]
original description (of Cirrodoce Hartman & Fauchald, 1971) Hartman, O.; Fauchald, K. (1971). Deep-water benthic polychaetous annelids off New England to Bermuda and other North Atlantic Areas. Part II. <em>Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology.</em> 6: 1-327., available online at http://hdl.handle.net/10088/3458
page(s): 39-40 [details]
From editor or global species database
Diagnosis Original diagnosis by Hartman (1936: 123): "Prostomium with 2 pairs of anterolateral clavate antennae; first 3 segments free from one another and from prostomium, but segment 1 greatly reduced and present only as lateral expansion from which first pair of tentacles arise; segment 2 reduced dorsally but well developed ventrally; segment 3 normally developed. Formula of tentacuar cirri: 1 + S 1/1 + S 1/N. Parapodia uniramous, with only composite setae. Dorsal cirri foliaceous." [details]Etymology Not stated. The name Clavadoce is composed by the Latin noun clava, meaning 'club', and, apparently, the ending of the name of the type genus of the family Phyllodocidae, Phyllodoce Lamarck, 1818 (a water nymph in Greek mythology). It refers presumably to the shape of the antennae and tentacular cirri of the new phyllodocid genus, which are described as being "clavate instead of filiform" (Hartman, 1936: 123). The word doce could also be used as a combining form of Greek origin, meaning 'to seem'. [details]