Peruvian Register of Marine Species

PeRMS source details

Zanol, Joana; Hutchings, Pat A.; Fauchald, Kristian. (2020). Eunice sensu lato (Annelida: Eunicidae) from Australia: description of seven new species and comments on previously reported species of the genera Eunice, Leodice and Nicidion. Zootaxa. 4748(1): 1-43.
377118
10.11646/zootaxa.4748.1.1 [view]
Zanol, Joana; Hutchings, Pat A.; Fauchald, Kristian
2020
<em>Eunice</em> <em>sensu lato</em> (Annelida: Eunicidae) from Australia: description of seven new species and comments on previously reported species of the genera <em>Eunice</em>, <em>Leodice</em> and <em>Nicidion</em>
Zootaxa
4748(1): 1-43
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb). [title with lato misspelled as 'latu' in pdf, corrected in metadata]
Available for editors  PDF available
Species traditionally considered to belong to Eunice are now, also, distributed in two other genera Leodice and Nicidion recently resurrected to reconcile Eunicidae taxonomy with its phylogenetic hypothesis. In Australia, Eunice species have been reported from all seas and sum up to 22 species. In this study, we propose 10 new combinations for traditional Eunice species, which should be moved to Leodice; describe seven new species, four of Eunice and three of Leodice; and comment on species previous recorded from the Australian Coast. Previous records of E. denticulata, E. filamentosa, E. grubei, E. indica, E. longicirris, E. microprion, E. paupera, E. tridentata, E. tubifex and E. vittata from Australia are considered dubious. Eunice tribranchiata, originally described from Australian specimens, is considered here to be an indeterminable species. This study also includes descriptions of Eunice, Leodice and Nicidion as well as key to these genera and their species recorded from Australia.
Australia
Systematics, Taxonomy
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
action
by
2020-03-05 00:57:20Z
created
2020-03-11 04:35:00Z
changed
2020-03-11 20:39:02Z
changed
2020-03-12 05:05:19Z
changed

Eunicidae Berthold, 1827 (identification resource)
 Etymology

The species name concinna, Latin, meaning neat, beautiful, was used in classical Latin also to indicate the ... [details]

 Etymology

The species name, confusus, is thoroughly deserved. We became aware that this species was mixed among specimens of ... [details]

 Etymology

The species name, Latin for knife-bearer, refers to the shape of the appendage of the anterior compound chaetae. [details]

 Etymology

The species name refers to the name of the key, Little Upolo Key, near where the type was collected. [details]

 Etymology

The species name refers to the presence of both bi- and tridentate appendages in the compound falciger chaetae, as ... [details]

 Etymology

The species is named in honor of Dr. James L. Edwards, a guiding spirit in the study of systematics and a leader ... [details]

 Etymology

The species name refers to Tasmania, close to the type locality of the species. [details]