Kinorhyncha taxon details

Centroderes drakei Neuhaus, Pardos, Sørensen & Higgins, 2014

1433106  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1433106)

accepted
Species
marine
Neuhaus, B.; Pardos, F.; Sørensen, M. V.; Higgins, R. P. (2014). New species of <em>Centroderes</em> (Kinorhyncha: Cyclorhagida) from the Northwest Atlantic Ocean, life cycle, and ground pattern of the genus. <em>Zootaxa.</em> 3901 (1): 1-69., available online at https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3901.1.1
note: The source says: published: 24 Dec. 2014. Description: pp. 27-39, figs 5H, 10−17, 19A, 20A, tabs 3, 5; Neuhaus et al. 2014: p. 27, not Centroderes sp. of Neuhaus (2013, p. 271, figs 5.1.13.A-B, 5...  
The source says: published: 24 Dec. 2014. Description: pp. 27-39, figs 5H, 10−17, 19A, 20A, tabs 3, 5; Neuhaus et al. 2014: p. 27, not Centroderes sp. of Neuhaus (2013, p. 271, figs 5.1.13.A-B, 5.2.4.A-C) but C. drakei and not Centroderes spinosus of Neuhaus (2013, p. 259) but C. drakei
 [details]  Available for editors  PDF available 
Holotype  USNM 1251465, geounit Bermuda Islands  
Holotype USNM 1251465, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
Etymology The name of the species is derived from the British Sir Francis Drake, nicknamed “El Draque”, active as pirate in the...  
Etymology The name of the species is derived from the British Sir Francis Drake, nicknamed “El Draque”, active as pirate in the Caribbean, birth about 1540, death 1596. Pirates have been regarded either as criminals or as heroes depending on the point of view. This is especially true for Sir Francis Drake. The species which is named after him appears problematic in its relationship to other species of Centroderes, so the name takes up the ambigouity of the name giver.
One popular name of Kinorhyncha is “muddragon” (see Neuhaus 2013) which rises the expectation of a fierceful animal. Hence the association with pirates’s names in this paper. [details]
Neuhaus, B. (2024). World Kinorhyncha Database. Centroderes drakei Neuhaus, Pardos, Sørensen & Higgins, 2014. Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/kinorhyncha/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1433106 on 2024-07-28
Date
action
by
2020-04-22 07:06:17Z
created

original description Neuhaus, B.; Pardos, F.; Sørensen, M. V.; Higgins, R. P. (2014). New species of <em>Centroderes</em> (Kinorhyncha: Cyclorhagida) from the Northwest Atlantic Ocean, life cycle, and ground pattern of the genus. <em>Zootaxa.</em> 3901 (1): 1-69., available online at https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3901.1.1
note: The source says: published: 24 Dec. 2014. Description: pp. 27-39, figs 5H, 10−17, 19A, 20A, tabs 3, 5; Neuhaus et al. 2014: p. 27, not Centroderes sp. of Neuhaus (2013, p. 271, figs 5.1.13.A-B, 5...  
The source says: published: 24 Dec. 2014. Description: pp. 27-39, figs 5H, 10−17, 19A, 20A, tabs 3, 5; Neuhaus et al. 2014: p. 27, not Centroderes sp. of Neuhaus (2013, p. 271, figs 5.1.13.A-B, 5.2.4.A-C) but C. drakei and not Centroderes spinosus of Neuhaus (2013, p. 259) but C. drakei
 [details]  Available for editors  PDF available 
 
 Present  Inaccurate  Introduced: alien  Containing type locality 
   

Holotype USNM 1251465, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
Nontype USNM 1251515, 1251516, 1251524 - 1251550, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
Nontype USNM 1251551, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
Nontype USNM 1251552, geounit Gulf of Mexico (not certain) [details]
Paratype MNB ZMB 5998 - ZMB 6002, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
Paratype USNM 1251466 - 1251514, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
Paratype USNM 1251517 - 1251523, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
Paratype ZMUC ZMUC-KIN-827 - ZMUC-KIN-832, geounit Bermuda Islands [details]
From editor or global species database
Etymology The name of the species is derived from the British Sir Francis Drake, nicknamed “El Draque”, active as pirate in the Caribbean, birth about 1540, death 1596. Pirates have been regarded either as criminals or as heroes depending on the point of view. This is especially true for Sir Francis Drake. The species which is named after him appears problematic in its relationship to other species of Centroderes, so the name takes up the ambigouity of the name giver.
One popular name of Kinorhyncha is “muddragon” (see Neuhaus 2013) which rises the expectation of a fierceful animal. Hence the association with pirates’s names in this paper. [details]

Synonymy Synonymy according to Neuhaus et al. (2014: p. 27):
not Centroderes sp. of Neuhaus (2013, p. 271, figs 5.1.13.A-B, 5.2.4.A-C) but C. drakei and not Centroderes spinosus of Neuhaus (2013, p. 259) but C. drakei [details]
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