Intertidal and subtidal to a depth of 100 m [details]
In subtidal, heterogeneous sands, 20–173 m. [details]
Only known from the type locality: Bassin d’Arcachon. France [details]
A deep-sea species, widely distributed in the Atlantic Ocean, to date recorded from the continental slopes of North ... [details]
Only known from the type locality: Tenerife, Canary Islands [details]
Canary Islands: Tenerife and Lanzarote. Shallow subtidal (12–17 m), [details]
Only known from the type locality: off Casablanca, Morocco [details]
Prior to this study, this species had been recorded from Sweden, Norway, and Italy. The new Belgian and Moroccan ... [details]
A bathyal species, the deepest enchytraeid ever recorded, occurring in a 2798–2885 m range in the Gulf of ... [details]
Atlantic and Mediterranean coasts of France, Iceland, Baltic Sea, west coast of Sweden, North Sea, Norwegian Sea ... [details]
Northeast Atlantic, so far known with certainty from Morocco and Scandinavia north to Tromsø, above the Arctic ... [details]
Northern Rockall Trough, off the coast of Scotland, to near the entrance to the English Channel (NE Atlantic Ocean). [details]
west coasts of Sweden and Norway, Morocco [details]
From Aquitania, the Roman name for southwestern France. [details]
From the Latin canarius, inhabiting the Canary Islands. [details]
From the Roman name of the Canary Islands, Insulae Fortunatae. [details]
From Mauretania, the ancient Roman name of the northwestern angle of the African continent, now corresponding to ... [details]
Named for the shape of the prostomium, using the Latin nouns papilla (= nipple) and nasus (= nose). [details]
Named for the heavily muscular ducts of the spermathecae, using the Latin torosus (= muscular, strong). [details]
Named after the Vikings, the Scandinavian sea adventurers and warriors who ruled many parts of Europe between the ... [details]