WoRMS name details
NomenclatureTaxonomytaxonomy source
Fauvel, P. (1923). Polychètes errantes. Faune de France. <em>Librairie de la Faculte des Sciences. Paris.</em> 5: 1-488., available online at http://www.faunedefrance.org/ page(s): 284, figure 108a-g; note: description and figure (after Marion & Bobretzky, 1875) [details]
status source
Musco, Luigi (look up in IMIS) [details]
status source
Pettibone, Marian H. (1963). Marine polychaete worms of the New England region. I. Aphroditidae through Trochochaetidae. <i>Bulletin of the United States National Museum</i>. 227(1): 1-356., available online at https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/7870746 page(s): 124; note:
Pettibone uses "Syllides longocirrata Oersted, 1845" whereas the original description was as Syllis (Syllides) so a genus recombination has occurred. Also strictly the epithet should be 'longocirratu...
Pettibone uses "Syllides longocirrata Oersted, 1845" whereas the original description was as Syllis (Syllides) so a genus recombination has occurred. Also strictly the epithet should be 'longocirratus' as first used by Ehlers (1897)
[details]
Otheradditional source
Riser, N.W. (1997). <i>Syllides eburneus</i>, a new species, with notes on other members of the genus (Polychaeta: Syllidae) from the coast of New England and New Brunswick. <em>Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington.</em> 110(1): 143-149., available online at https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/35458165 [details]
From editor or global species database
Spelling Syllides is masculine so the adjectival species-group name must be 'longocirratus' Authors continue not to be consistent with the suffix, or appear unaware that 'longocirrata' is not the spelling (eg Lucas et al 2018 who use 'Syllides longocirrata Ørsted, 1845' when '-cirratus' is correct and Syllides used at full genus level is a recombination meaning Ørsted should be in parenthesis). [details]Unreviewed
Distribution Maine to Massachusetts; New Zealand; South Africa; Chile; Baltic; Mediterranean [details]
Habitat Found from the intertidal zone to 46 m depth over sand and mud. [details]
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