About | Search taxa | Taxon tree | Checklist | Attributes | Photogallery | Stats | Log in

Mysidacea taxon details

Schizurakrops Wittmann, 2024

1757840  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1757840)

accepted
Genus

Ordering

  • Alphabetically
  • By status

Children Display

marine
Wittmann, K. J. (2024). The Mysidae (Crustacea, Mysida) of the ANDEEP I–III expeditions to the Antarctic deep sea with the description of twelve new species, establishment of four new genera and with world-wide keys to the species of Erythropinae and Mysidellinae. <em>European Journal of Taxonomy.</em> 940: 1-180., available online at https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2024.940.2577 [details] Available for editors  PDF available
Type locality contained in Powell Basin  
type locality contained in Powell Basin [details]
Etymology The genus name is a noun with Greek masculine ending, condensed from the Ancient Greek verb ‘σχίζω’...  
Etymology The genus name is a noun with Greek masculine ending, condensed from the Ancient Greek verb ‘σχίζω’ (‘divide’), noun ‘οὐρά’ (‘tail’), adjective ‘άκρος’ (‘acute’) and noun ‘ὤψ’ (‘eye’), referring to the cleft telson in combination with rostrally acute eye rudiments. [details]
Mees, J.; Meland, K. (Eds) (2012 onwards). World List of Lophogastrida, Stygiomysida and Mysida. Schizurakrops Wittmann, 2024. Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/mysidacea/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1757840 on 2026-05-09
Date
action
by
2024-06-21 07:32:57Z
created

original description Wittmann, K. J. (2024). The Mysidae (Crustacea, Mysida) of the ANDEEP I–III expeditions to the Antarctic deep sea with the description of twelve new species, establishment of four new genera and with world-wide keys to the species of Erythropinae and Mysidellinae. <em>European Journal of Taxonomy.</em> 940: 1-180., available online at https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2024.940.2577 [details] Available for editors  PDF available
 
 Present  Inaccurate  Introduced: alien  Containing type locality 
   

From editor or global species database
Etymology The genus name is a noun with Greek masculine ending, condensed from the Ancient Greek verb ‘σχίζω’ (‘divide’), noun ‘οὐρά’ (‘tail’), adjective ‘άκρος’ (‘acute’) and noun ‘ὤψ’ (‘eye’), referring to the cleft telson in combination with rostrally acute eye rudiments. [details]
    Definitions

Loading...