Peruvian Register of Marine Species
PeRMS source details
First publication date possibly 1904 (see title page and following pages of BHL scanned book, but that seems to be a later reprint from the Smithsonian from 1910), but Zoological Record (vol 42 part 2) states the publication date is 1905.
Practically nothing was known of the annelids of the North Pacific coast before Johnson's valuable reports of 1897 and 1901 - the first entitled 'A Preliminary Account of the Marine Annelids of the Pacific Coast,' the other 'The Polychaeta of the Puget Sound Region.' This is especially true of Alaska, a few species only having been recorded north of Vancouver Island, British Columbia; therefore the collections made by Dr. William E. Ritter, of the University of California, and Dr. Wesley R. Coe, of Yale University, as members of the Harriman Alaska Expedition of 1899, are of great interest.
North-eastern Pacific boreal
Not stated, but the Latin gracilis 'slender' name for H. gracilis is likely referring to the simple verticil spines. [details]
Not stated, but for E. humilis possibly the name from Latin humilis 'humble', is referring to the small size of the ... [details]
Potamilla is feminine, and Pseudopotamilla has similarly been treated as feminine, with all new adjectival names ... [details]
Unreplaced homonym to Spirorbis tridentatus Levinsen, 1884, which was originally a variety as S. granulatus ... [details]
Spirorbis pseudocorrugatus was erected as a new name for the records of Spirorbis corrugatus Montagu sensu Caullery ... [details]
Bush (1905: 248, 250) used Spirorbis corrugatus Montagu for sinistral specimens from Ireland, and pointed out that ... [details]
In her remarks Bush suggests this species might be Spirorbis lamellosa Lamarck, 1818, indeterminable from the ... [details]
Type species Dentalium subulatum Deshayes, 1825 by monotypy. Its junior synonymy to Dentalium arietinum O. F. ... [details]
Guaymas, Gulf of California coast, Sonora state, Mexico, map estimate 27.9087° -110.8931°. Bush provides no ... [details]
Port Phillip, Victoria, Australia, associated with Spirorbis inversus on the bryozoan Menipea cirrata [details]
Quatrefages (1866: 421) is either unaware of, or ignoring Bispira Krøyer, 1856, when he creates Distylia for 5 ... [details]