Detailed information for reference 13065

 Anker, A. and T. Komai (2004) Descriptions of two new species of alpheid shrimps from Japan and Australia, with notes on taxonomy of Automate De Man, Coronalpheus Wicksten and Bermudacaris Anker and Iliffe (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea). Journal of Natural History 38(15): 1895–1914. URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/0022293031000156312 PDF is 203kB

 

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2007-08-09 Sammy De Grave Viewed paper/PDF original

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2012-01-25 N. Dean Pentcheff Added issue number
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Reference record internal details

Reference ID 13065
Reference type journalarticle
Authors Anker, A.
Komai, T.
Publication Year (for display) 2004
Publication Year (for sorting) 2004
Title Descriptions of two new species of alpheid shrimps from Japan and Australia, with notes on taxonomy of _Automate _De Man, _Coronalpheus _Wicksten and _Bermudacaris _Anker and Iliffe (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea)
Secondary Title Journal of Natural History
Secondary Authors  
Tertiary Title  
Tertiary Authors  
Volume 38
Issue 15
Pages 1895–1914
Place published  
Published  
Date  
URL DOI: 10.1080/0022293031000156312
Abstract
Two new species of the caridean family Alpheidae are described from distant Indo-Pacific localities: Automate hayashii sp. nov. from Hakodate Bay, southern Hokkaido, Japan, and Bermudacaris australiensis sp. nov. from the North-West Shelf off Western Australia. Automate hayashii appears closest to the poorly known A. salomoni Coutière, 1908. Bermudacaris australiensis sp. nov., the second species of the genus, represents the first discovery of the genus in the Indo-Pacific. The type species of Bermudacaris Anker and Iliffe, 2000, B. harti Anker and Iliffe, 2000, was described from anchialine caves of Bermuda, while the unique specimen of Bermudacaris australiensis sp. nov. was collected from an apparently typical marine environment. Relationships among the species of Automate De Man, 1888, Bermudacaris and Coronalpheus Wicksten, 1999 are discussed. Characters separating these three closely related genera, including the development of the rostrum, the shape of the eye-stalks, the absence of the appendix masculina, and the features of the first pereopods, are reassessed. Three informal species groups are recognized in Automate, showing certain heterogeneity of this genus.
Keywords Automate Automate hayashii Automate salomoni Bermudacaris Bermudacaris australiensis Coronalpheus Coronalpheus natator
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Reference Contributor Tag sdegrave
Last Changed Wed Dec 5 10:57:38 2012