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Echinoidea name details

Pedicellata

1596248  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1596248)

Griffith & Pidgeon, 1834
 unaccepted (paraphyletic)
Order
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
recent + fossil
Griffith E. & Pidgeon E. (1833-1834). The Mollusca and Radiata. Vol. 12, In: E. Griffith, [1824]−1835, The Animal Kingdom arranged in conformity with its organization, by the Baron Cuvier, [...]. London: Whittaker and Co., viii + 601 pp., 61 pls. [Date of publication after Evenhuis (2009): pp. 1-384, Mollusca pls. 1−39, Zoophytes pls 1-20 - 1833; pp. viii + 385-601, Mollusca corrected pls. 28*, 36*, 37*, pls. 40-41 - 1834]. , available online at http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/40578
page(s): 439 [details]   
Status Since the order Pedicellata of Griffith & Pidgeon (1834) included some holothurioids (namely Holothuria) in addition to...  
Status Since the order Pedicellata of Griffith & Pidgeon (1834) included some holothurioids (namely Holothuria) in addition to echinoides, asteroids, crinoids, but not all (Molpadia was included in a second order "Apedicellata"), it is clearly paraphyletic. [details]
Kroh, A.; Mooi, R. (2024). World Echinoidea Database. Pedicellata. Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/echinoidea/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1596248 on 2024-04-20
Date
action
by
2022-08-02 11:46:42Z
created

original description Griffith E. & Pidgeon E. (1833-1834). The Mollusca and Radiata. Vol. 12, In: E. Griffith, [1824]−1835, The Animal Kingdom arranged in conformity with its organization, by the Baron Cuvier, [...]. London: Whittaker and Co., viii + 601 pp., 61 pls. [Date of publication after Evenhuis (2009): pp. 1-384, Mollusca pls. 1−39, Zoophytes pls 1-20 - 1833; pp. viii + 385-601, Mollusca corrected pls. 28*, 36*, 37*, pls. 40-41 - 1834]. , available online at http://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/40578
page(s): 439 [details]   
From editor or global species database
Status Since the order Pedicellata of Griffith & Pidgeon (1834) included some holothurioids (namely Holothuria) in addition to echinoides, asteroids, crinoids, but not all (Molpadia was included in a second order "Apedicellata"), it is clearly paraphyletic. [details]

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