-
Ahyong S.T. & Chan T. 2004. Polychelid lobsters of Taiwan (Decapoda: Polychelidae). The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 52(1): 171-182
Campagnes accessibles citées (4) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Ahyong S.T. & Ng P.K. 2009. The Cymonomidae of the Philippines (Crustacea: Decapoda: Brachyura), with descriptions of four new species. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology suppl. 20: 233-246
Campagnes accessibles citées (25) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BOA0,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CORINDON 2,
EBISCO,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 8,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SANTO 2006,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2003,
TAIWAN 2004
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Ahyong S.T. & Ng P.K. 2017. East Asian Cymonomid Crabs (Crustacea: Brachyura). Zoological Studies 56(24): 1-20. DOI:10.6620/ZS.2017.56-24
Résumé [+]
[-]
Cymonomid crabs are small cryptic deep-water brachyurans occurring worldwide. Six species have been reported from East Asia: one from both Taiwan and Japan (C. andamanicus Alcock, 1905) and five from Japan only (C. curvirostris Sakai, 1965, C. japonicus Balss, 1922, C. sagamiensis Sakai, 1983, C. soela Ahyong and Brown, 2003, C. umitakae Takeda, 1981). Cymonomus curvirostris, C. japonicus, C. sagamiensis and C. umitakae were described from Japanese waters, but C. andamanicus and C. soela have much more distant type localities - the Andaman Sea and southeastern Australia, respectively. We review all previous records of Cymonomus from East Asia, describe two new species, and clarify the status of records of C. andamanicus and C. soela from the region. Records of C. andamanicus and C. soela from East Asia are referable to two new species occurring in both Taiwan and Japan. The identities of C. japonicus and C. sagamiensis are fixed by neotype selection; C. sagamiensis is made a junior objective synonym of C. umitakae. Six species of Cymonomus are now recorded from Japan, of which two also occur off Taiwan. We also report on cymonomids collected by Taiwanese research vessels in the South China Sea (Dongsha and Macclesfield Bank) of which four species were collected, including C. hakuhoae Takeda and Moosa, 1990, not previously found in Japan or Taiwan. A key to the species of Cymonomus from East Asia and the South China Sea is included.
Campagnes accessibles citées (8) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Bamber R.N. 2004. Pycnogonids (Arthropoda: Pygnogonida) from Taiwan, with description of three new species. Zootaxa 458: 1-12
Résumé [+]
[-]
Pycnogonid material collected between August 2000 and August 2003 from Taiwanese waters at depths between 100 and 2620 m is described. The thirty-three specimens represent ten species, and include one hitherto undescribed species of each of the genera Nymphon, Colossendeis and Pycnogonum. There are no previously published records of pycnogonids from Taiwan. Nymphon polyglia sp. nov. has multiple cement gland pores on the femur and first tibia, and tarsus and propodus subequal in length. Colossendeis mycterismos sp. nov. has affinities with C. pipetta, but has a tarsus shorter than the propodus. Pycnogonum cranaobyrsa sp. nov. has a slender tapering proboscis, no auxiliary claws and pointed mid-dorsal trunk tubercles, with a pustulate integument and a rounded ocular tubercle. The cement-gland openings of Heterofragilia hirsuta are described.
Campagnes accessibles citées (3) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Beu A.G. 2008. Recent deep-water Cassidae of the world. A revision of Galeodea, Oocorys, Sconsia, Echinophoria and relatedtaxa, with new genera and species (Mollusca, Gastropoda), in Héros V., Cowie R.H. & Bouchet P.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 25. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 196:269-387, ISBN:978-2-85653-614-8
Résumé [+]
[-]
Shell, radular, opercular and external anatomical characters are surveyed in world Recent deep-water Cassidae, leading to the recognition of three subfamilies: Cassinae, Oocorythinae and Phaliinae. All Recent species are revised of Galeodea Link, 1807 (=Galeoocorys Kuroda & Habe, 1957), Microsconsia n. gen. and Sconsia Gray, 1847, all included in subfamily Cassinae; of Oocorys Fischer,
1883 (= Benthodolium Verrill & Smith, 1884, = Hadroocorys Quinn, 1980), Eucorys n. gen. (including Oocorys bartschi Rehder, 1943 and O. barbouri Clench & Aguayo, 1939) and Dalium Dall, 1889, all included in subfamily Oocorythinae; and of Echinophoria Sacco, 1890, included in subfamily Phaliinae. New species named are Galeodea plauta n. sp. (northwestern New Zealand), Microsconsia limpusi n. sp. (southeastern Queensland, Australia), and Oocorys grandis n. sp. (central Indian Ocean, and southeastern Atlantic, off
Namibia). Galeodea bituminata (Martin, 1933) (based on a Pliocene fossil from Buton Island, Indonesia) is an earlier name for G. echinophorella Habe, 1961; G. carolimartini Beets, 1943 is another earlier name for G. echinophorella. The name usually accepted for the type species of Sconsia, S. striata (Lamarck, 1816), is a junior secondary homonym of S. striata (J. Sowerby, 1812) and the valid name for this species is S. grayi (A. Adams, 1855). Echinophoria kurodai Abbott, 1968 was based on small specimens of E. wyvillei (Watson, 1886), and E. oschei Mühlhäusser, 1992 was based on Indian Ocean specimens of E. wyvillei. Echinophoria carnosa Kuroda & Habe, 1961 is limited to southern Japan to the Philippine Islands.
Campagnes accessibles citées (36) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BENTHEDI,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CORAIL 2,
Restreint,
Restreint,
EBISCO,
HALICAL 1,
KARUBAR,
MD28 (SAFARI II),
MD32 (REUNION),
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
NORFOLK 2,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
Restreint,
Restreint,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
Restreint,
Restreint
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Bouchet P. & Cosel R.V. 2004. The world's largest lucinid is an undescribed species from Taiwan (Mollusca : Bivalvia). Zoological Studies 43(4): 704-711
Résumé [+]
[-]
Meganodontia acetabulum is described as a new genus and species of the Lucinidae, based on valves trawled at 256 to 472 m depths on the Tashi fishing ground off the northeastern coast of Taiwan. The new genus is close to Anodontia but differs mainly in the small umbones, the perfectly circular outline, the hinge and ligament, and the large muscle impressions. It is the largest known Recent species of Lucinidae. Other species of bivalves, belonging to families symbiotically associated with chemautotrophic bacteria, have been taken at the same or nearby stations, suggesting that the Tashi fishing ground is a site where chemosymblosis plays an important role in biomass production and ecosystem function.
Campagnes accessibles citées (1) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Bouchet P., Héros V., Lozouet P. & Maestrati P. 2008. A quarter-century of deep-sea malacological exploration in the South and West Pacific: Where do we stand? How far to go?, in Héros V., Cowie R.H. & Bouchet P.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 25. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 196:9-40, ISBN:978-2-85653-614-8
Résumé [+]
[-]
The Institut de Recherche pour le Développement (IRD, formerly ORSTOM) and Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle (MNHN) launched in the early 1980s a suite of oceanographic expeditions to sample the deep-water benthos of the tropical South and West Pacific, with emphasis on the 100-1,500 m bathymetric zone. This paper reviews the development of this programme to date. It describes the procedures involved in curating the material collected and the involvement of an international network of taxonomic experts to identify, describe and name the molluscan fauna. So far, 1,028 species of molluscs have been recorded from the New
Caledonia Exclusive Economic Zone from depths below 100 m, and 601 of these (58.4%) were new species. An additional 142 new species have been described from other South Pacifi c island groups (Solomon Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji, Wallis and Futuna, Tonga, Marquesas Islands and Austral Islands). However, the hyper-diverse families have essentially remained untouched. Regional differences among island groups are high, and New Caledonia, which has been sampled best, shows several discrete areas of micro-endemism.
We speculate that the deep-sea mollusc fauna of New Caledonia may amount to 15-20,000 species, and the corresponding number for the whole South Pacifi c may be in the order of 20-30,000 species.
Campagnes accessibles citées (63) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
AZTEQUE,
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BERYX 11,
BERYX 2,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BOA0,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CALSUB,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
CONCALIS,
CORAIL 2,
CORINDON 2,
GEMINI,
HALICAL 1,
HALIPRO 1,
HALIPRO 2,
KARUBAR,
LAGON,
LITHIST,
LUMIWAN 2008,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
PALEO-SURPRISE,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SALOMONBOA 3,
SANTO 2006,
SMCB,
SMIB 1,
SMIB 10,
SMIB 2,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 6,
SMIB 8,
SMIB 9,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2004,
VAUBAN 1978-1979,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Boyko C.B. 2004. The Bopyridae (Crustacea: Isopoda) of Taiwan. Zoological Studies 43(4): 677-703
Résumé [+]
[-]
This study adds 8 bopyrids to the 5 species previously known from Taiwan. None of the species are new to science, but all are new to the Taiwanese fauna. All of the hosts for the 8 species are new. Four species redescribed herein, Pseudione retrorsa Richardson, Parioninella obovata Shiino, Parapenaeon tertium Nierstrasz and Brender 6 Brandis, and Bopyrus stebbingi Nierstrasz and Brender Brandis, are reported for the 1st time since their original descriptions, with each representing a substantial range extension. The geographic and depth distributions of 2 additional species, Bopyroides hippolytes (Kroyer) and Athelges takanoshimensis Ishii, are greatly extended. Two new genera are erected for P. obovata and B. stebbingi. Pseudione lenticeps Shiino is synonymized with P. retrorsa, which is transferred to the genus Aporobopyrus Nobili. Parapenaeon coarctatum tuberculata is raised to the level of full species. Identifications of hosts as cited in older literature are updated to current nomenclature.
Campagnes accessibles citées (5) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Burukovsky R.N. 2013. Shrimps of the family Nematocarcinidae Smith, 1884 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Caridea) from Taiwan and Philippines collected by the TAIWAN, PANGLAO 2005 and AURORA expeditions in the western Pacific, in Ahyong S.T., Chan T., Corbari L. & Ng P.K.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 27. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 204:155-189, ISBN:978-2-85653-692-6
Résumé [+]
[-]
During the recent Taiwan TAIWAN and the Philippines PANGLAO 2005 and AURORA deep-sea expeditions, many specimens of
nematocarcinid shrimp were collected. Altogether three genera and 13 species are identified: Nigmatullinus acanthitelsonis (Pequegnat, 1970), Segonzackomaius altus (Bate, 1888), Nematocarcinus chacei Burukovsky, 2002, N. combensis Burukovsky, 2000, N. crosnieri Burukovsky, 2000, N. gracilis Bate, 1888, N. productus Bate, 1888, N. rectirostris Burukovsky, 1991, N. richeri Burukovsky, 2000, N. subtegulisfactus Burukovsky, 2000, N. subtilis Burukovsky, 2000, N. tenuipes Bate, 1888 and N. tenuirostris Bate, 1888. Amongst them, S. altus, N. chacei and N. crosnieri are the second records since their original descriptions. Moreover, two genera and 11 species are new records for Taiwan while two species are new Philippine records. Diagnoses for the family, subfamilies, and genera and a key to all species of Nematocarcinus A. Milne-Edwards, 1881 are given. Colour photographs of 10 species are also provided. The studied area was subdivided into northern and southern subareas. The northern area includes the waters around Taiwan (21°18’-25°22’N and 117°17’-123°01’E), and the southern area the waters of the Philippines (08°33’-16°06’N and 121°30’-124°10’E). Five species occur in both subareas. A comparison of the present data with the known data on the nematocarcinid shrimp fauna of the Indo-Malay area or East Indies Triangle (i.e. the centre of species diversity of shrimps of family Nematocarcinidae) revealed that the area between Taiwan and the northern Philippines is an ecotone, with a transitional nematocarcinid shrimp fauna between the fauna of the East Indies Triangle and the typical Indo-West-Pacific fauna.
Campagnes accessibles citées (5) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Castro P., Williams A.B. & Cooper L.L. 2003. Revision of the family Latreilliidae Stimpson, 1858 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura). Zoosystema 25(4): 601-634
Campagnes accessibles citées (32) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 2,
Restreint,
CORINDON 2,
HALIPRO 1,
KARUBAR,
LAGON,
LIFOU 2000,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
PALEO-SURPRISE,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
VAUBAN 1978-1979,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Castro p. 2007. A reappraisal of the family Goneplacidae MacLeay, 1838 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura) and revision of the subfamily Goneplacinae, with the description of 10 new genera and 18 new species. Zoosystema 29(4): 609-774
Résumé [+]
[-]
A reappraisal of the taxonomy of the brachyuran crabs belonging to the family Goneplacidae MacLeay, 1838 sensu lato has resulted in the revision of the subfamily Goneplacinae, which combines the subfamilies Goneplacinae MacLeay, 1838 and Carcinoplacinae H. Milne Edwards, 1852. Most of the 66 species of Goneplacinae sensu stricto that are listed herein inhabit relatively deep water and are infrequently collected. The subfamily Goneplacinae sensu stricto now consists of 17 genera of which 10 are being described as new: Carcinoplax H. Milne Edwards, 1852, with 18 species of which four are new; Entricoplax n. gen., monotypic; Exopheticus n. gen., with two species; Goneplacoides n. gen., monotypic; Goneplax Leach, 1814, with four species; Hadroplax n. gen., monotypic; Menoplax n. gen., monotypic; Microgoneplax n. gen., with five species of which four are new; Neogoneplax n. gen., with three species of which two are new; Neommatocarcinus Takeda & Miyake, 1969, monotypic; Notonyx A. Milne-Edwards, 1873, with three species; Ommatocarcinus White, 1852, with four species; Paragoneplax n. gen., monotypic; Psopheticus Wood-Mason, 1892, with four species; Pycnoplax n. gen., with five species of which one is new; Singhaplax Serene & Soh, 1976, with seven species of which four are new; and Thyraplax n. gen., with five species of which three are new. All goneplacine genera are exclusive to the Indo-West Pacific region (plus contiguous temperate areas) except Goneplax, which is so far known mostly from the Atlantic and Mediterranean regions. Four nominal species described by other authors were found to be junior subjective synonyms for other species: Carcinoplax verdensis Rathbun, 1914 and C polita Guinot, 1989 synonymous of C specularis Rathbun, 1914; Goneplax megalops Komatsu & Takeda, 2003 of Goneplacoides marivenae (Komatsu & Takeda, 2003) n. comb.; and Psopheticus insolitus Guinot, 1990 of P stridulans Wood-Mason, 1892.
Campagnes accessibles citées (44) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BERYX 11,
BERYX 2,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 2,
CORAIL 2,
CORINDON 2,
EBISCO,
HALIPRO 1,
KARUBAR,
LAGON,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
PANGLAO 2004,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SMCB,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2004,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Chan B.K., Prabowo R.E. & Lee K.S. 2010. North West Pacific deep-sea barnacles (Cirripedia, Thoracica) collected by the TAIWAN expeditions, with descriptions of two new species. Zootaxa 2405: 1–47
Résumé [+]
[-]
Taiwan is a large island in north western Pacific waters with the sea floor connecting to two major deep-sea basins, the
eastern waters facing the Pacific Ocean (to 4000 m depth) and linking to the Philippine Basin, whilst south western
waters are associated with the South China Sea Basin (up to 1000 m). Previously, the biodiversity of Taiwanese deep-sea
barnacles had not been studied extensively, due to a lack of deep-sea expeditions and sampling. Recently, several
TAIWAN deep-sea cruises investigated the biodiversity of the deep-sea fauna of Taiwan and sampling was conducted to
depths of 4000 m. The present study reports on the biodiversity of the deep-sea barnacles of Taiwan, a total of 18 species.
One species was previously recorded from Taiwanese waters and 17 are new records, including two new species belong
to the genera Litoscalpellum and Altiverruca.
Campagnes accessibles citées (3) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Chan T. 2004. The ‘‘Plesionika rostricrescentis (Bate, 1888)’’ and ‘‘P. lophotes Chace, 1985’’ species groups of Plesionika Bate, 1888, with descriptions of five new species (Crustacea: Decapoda: Pandalidae), in Marshall B.A. & Richer de forges B.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 23. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 191:293-318, ISBN:2-85653-557-7
Résumé [+]
[-]
Before the present study, Plesionika rostricrescentis (Bate, 1888) and P. lophotes Chace, 1985 were the two Plesionika species unique in having a high basal rostral crest. A recently described species, P. erythrocyclus Chan & Crosnier, 1997 has a low basal rostral crest but is evidently related to P. rostricrescentis. Close examination of the abundant material collected during the MUSORSTOM expeditions and from Taiwan revealed that there are at least eight species in this ‘‘P. rostricrescentis-P. lophotes’’ species complex. These taxa are morphologically very similar but can be distinguished by their very distinctive colorations, which are often striking and consist of large circular spots. In the ‘‘P. rostricrescentis’’ group, which has the dorsal margin of the rostrum unarmed between the anteriormost tooth of the basal rostral crest and the subapical teeth, five species are recognized. Plesionika rostricrescentis is still known only by the holotype from the Kai Islands. Two new species, P. hsuehyui and P. suffusa, closely similar to P. rostricrescentis, are described. Plesionika hsuehyui is widely distributed from Taiwan to Fiji, while P. suffusa has only been found off New Caledonia. Plesionika erythrocyclus, previously known only from Taiwan and French Polynesia, occurs widely in the southern Pacific. Another new species, P. bimaculata, which closely resembles P. erythrocyclus, is distributed off New Caledonia and in adjacent areas. Three species are recognized in the ‘‘P. lophotes’’ group, which bear dorsal rostral teeth between the basal rostral crest and subapical teeth. Plesionika lophotes is restricted to the area between Japan and northwestern Australia. Two further closely similar new species, P. rufomaculata and P. scopifera are described, the former widely distributed from Okinawa to Futuna Island, the latter only off New Caledonia and Tonga. Although coloration is very important in distinguishing these species, species with similar color patterns do not necessarily belong to the same species group. Morphologically, these species are mainly separated by the height of the basal rostral crest, the number of rostral teeth, and the length of the stylocerite and the dactyli of the posterior three pereiopods. However, there is sexual dimorphism in the development of the basal rostral crest in these species, sometimes making positive identification of males and young specimens difficult.
Campagnes accessibles citées (29) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
HALICAL 1,
LAGON,
LITHIST,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
NORFOLK 1,
SMIB 2,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 6,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Chan T., Ma K.Y. & Chu K.H. 2013. The deep-sea spiny lobster genus Puerulus Ortmann, 1897 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Palinuridae), with descriptions of five new species, in Ahyong S.T., Chan T., Corbari L. & Ng P.K.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 27. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 204:191-230, ISBN:978-2-85653-692-6
Résumé [+]
[-]
Recent French deep-sea expeditions in the Indo-West Pacific resulted in the collection of abundant material of the deep-sea lobster genus Puerulus Ortmann, 1897 (Palinuridae). Difficulties in identification necessitated a generic revision and as a result, five new species are described, all of which are similar to P. angulatus (Bate, 1888). Puerulus angulatus was thought to have a wide distribution from eastern Africa to Marquesas Islands, but is now restricted to the western Pacific, from Japan to Australia. Of the five new species, P. gibbosus n. sp. is found in eastern Africa, P. mesodontus n. sp. from Japan to Fiji, P. richeri n. sp. from the New Caledonia to Marquesas Islands, while P. sericus n. sp. and P. quadridentis n. sp. mainly occur around New Caledonia. Of the other three previously described species, the distribution of P. velutinus Holthuis, 1963, is extended to Fiji, while P. sewelli Ramadan, 1938, and P. carinatus Borradaile, 1910, are still only known from the northern and western parts of the Indian Ocean, respectively. COI gene sequence differences support the morphological species distinctions.
Campagnes accessibles citées (54) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
AZTEQUE,
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHEDI,
BERYX 11,
BERYX 2,
BIOCAL,
BIOPAPUA,
BOA0,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
Restreint,
EBISCO,
EXBODI,
HALIPRO 1,
KARUBAR,
LITHIST,
MAINBAZA,
Restreint,
MIRIKY,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
PALEO-SURPRISE,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SALOMONBOA 3,
SANTO 2006,
SMCB,
SMIB 1,
SMIB 2,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2001,
TARASOC,
TERRASSES,
VAUBAN 1978-1979,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Chang S.C., Chan T.Y. & Ahyong S.T. 2014. Two new species of the rare lobster genus Thaumastocheles Wood-Mason, 1874 (Reptantia: Nephropidae) discovered from recent deep-sea expeditions in the Indo-West Pacific. Journal of Crustacean Biology 34(1): 107-122. DOI:10.1163/1937240X-00002201
Résumé [+]
[-]
Specimens of species closely related to the rare deep-sea lobster Thaumastocheles japonicus Calman, 1913 were obtained from recent deep-sea expeditions in the West Pacific. Close examination of these specimens, as well as molecular analysis, showed that they represent two species new to science, with many morphological and significant genetic differences (barcoding gene COI sequence divergences 11.5- 14.8%) between each other as well as T. japonicus. Re-examination of the specimens previously assigned to T. japonicus revealed that true T. japonicus has a more northern distribution, from Japan to the South China Sea and the Philippines. The two new species have more southern distributions with T. bipristis n. sp. Restricted to the Philippines and Indonesia, and T. massonktenos n. sp. Being widely distributed in the Indo-West Pacific, from the South China Sea to Madagascar and New Caledonia. The genetic data also suggest that T. dochmiodon Chan and de Saint Laurent, 1999 may represent a polymorphic male form of T. japonicus.
Campagnes accessibles citées (11) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BIOPAPUA,
Restreint,
HALIPRO 1,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
PANGLAO 2005,
PAPUA NIUGINI,
SALOMON 2,
TAIWAN 2001
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Chang S.C. & Chan T.Y. 2019. On the clawed lobsters of the genus Nephropsis Wood-Mason, 1872 recently collected from deep-sea cruises off Taiwan and the South China Sea (Crustacea, Decapoda, Nephropidae). ZooKeys 833: 41-58. DOI:10.3897/zookeys.833.32837
Résumé [+]
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Recent deep-sea cruises using Taiwanese research vessels off Taiwan and in the South China Sea yielded seven species of the clawed lobster genus Nephropsis Wood-Mason, 1872. Four species are new records for Taiwan (Nephropsis acanthura Macpherson, 1990, N. holthuisi Macpherson, 1993, N. serrata Macpherson, 1993, and N. suhmi Bate, 1888) and three species are new records of Dongsha (under the jurisdiction of Taiwan) in the South China Sea (N. ensirostris Alcock, 1901, N. stewarti Wood-Mason, 1872, and N. suhmi). Altogether, five and four species of this genus are now known from Taiwan and Dongsha, respectively. The diagnostic characters and coloration are illustrated for most, if not all, of these species.
Campagnes accessibles citées (7) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Cleva R. 2004. Stylodactylidae and Bathypalaemonellidae from Taiwan (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea). Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 52(2): 497–511
Résumé [+]
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Seven shrimp species of the family Stylodactylidae are reported here from Taiwanese waters, four of which represent new records for the area. Only three species of this family were previously known from Taiwan: Stylodactylus in multidentatus Kubo, 1942, and Parastylodactylus bimaxillaris (Bate, 1888), both present in the collection studied here, and Bathystylodactylus inflatus Hanamura & Takeda, 1996, no material in the present collection. Stylodactylus major Hayashi & Miyake, 1968, is recorded for the second time. The other species are: Stylodactylus libratus Chace, 1983, Stylodactylus licinus Chace, 1983, and Stylodactylus tokarensis Zarenkov, 1968. On another hand, the status of a seventh species, related to Stylodactylus pubescens Burukovsky 1990, is left unresolved. The rare deep-sea shrimp family Bathypalaemonellidae is added to the Taiwanese decapod fauna, being represented by four species, one of which is new: Bathypalaemonella hayashii Komai, 1995; Bathypalaemonetes brevirostris (Bruce, 1986); Bathypalaemonetes pilosipes (Bruce, 1986) and Bathypalaemonetes chani, new species.
Campagnes accessibles citées (19) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 2,
KARUBAR,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
SALOMON 1,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2003
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Cosel R.V. 2008. A new bathymodioline mussel (Bivalvia: Mytiloidea: Mytilidae: Bathymodiolinae) from vent sites near Kueishan Island, north east Taiwan. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology suppl. 19: 105-114
Résumé [+]
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A new species of bathymodioline mussel, Bathymodiolus (sensu lato) taiwanensis, new species, is described from hydrothermal vents in rather shallow water (200-355 m) near Kueishan Island (Turtle Mountain Island) off the northeast coast of Taiwan, on the Okinawa Arc. The new mussel belongs to the Bathymodiolus (sensu lato) childressi chide which is characterized by a so-called "multibundle" foot-byssus retractor muscle complex and subterminal to terminal umbones. With a length of up to 56 mm, B. (sensu lato) taiwanensis, new species, is the smallest bathymodioline mytilid yet known.
Campagnes accessibles citées (1) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Cosel R.V. & Bouchet P. 2008. Tropical deep-water lucinids (Mollusca: Bivalvia) from the Indo-Pacific: essentially unknown, but diverse and occasionally gigantic, in Héros V., Cowie R.H. & Bouchet P.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 25. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 196:115-213, ISBN:978-2-85653-614-8
Résumé [+]
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Species of the bivalve family Lucinidae form a previously unrecognized and signifi cant component of bivalve assemblages at bathyal depths (150-1000 m) in the Indo-West Pacifi c province. Elliptiolucina labeyriei n. gen., n. sp., from 2570 m, is the deepest-occurring lucinid species. South-East Asian seas, from Taiwan to the Arafura Sea, are a hotspot of deep-water lucinid diversity, with 11 species recorded from the Philippines and 14 from Indonesia. Numerous species are in the 20-50 mm range, with several up to 75-80 mm
in size, and Meganodontia acetabulum reaches 150 mm. Several species co-occur with representatives of the Vesicomyidae, characteristic of seep and vent communities. It is hypothesized that the lucinid species of this radiation live in discrete pockets of poorly oxygenated sediments enriched in sulfi de by plant debris from nearby land masses and/or diffuse seeping. A parallel is drawn with
the “Calcari a Lucina” from the Miocene of Europe. Nine new genera and 32 new species are described.
Campagnes accessibles citées (17) [+]
[-]
BENTHAUS,
BORDAU 1,
CORINDON 2,
Restreint,
Restreint,
KARUBAR,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 9,
SALOMON 1,
Restreint,
Restreint,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2004
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Dijkstra H.H. & Maestrati P. 2009. New bathyal species and records of Pectinoidea (Bivalvia: Propeamussiidae and Pectinidae) from Taiwan. Bulletin of Malacology, Taiwan 33: 37-54
Résumé [+]
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New species: Parvamussium liaoi n. sp., Scaeochlamys squamea n. sp. New records for Taiwan: Propeamussium siratama, Parvamussium aldeynzeri, Parvamussium cristatellum, Parvamussium undisonum, Parvamussium vesiculatum, Ciclopecten fluctuatus, Delectopecten musorstomi.
Campagnes accessibles citées (3) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Fraussen K. & Stahlschmidt P. 2014. The extensive Indo-Pacific radiation of Phaenomenella Fraussen & Hadorn, 2006 (Gastropoda: Buccinidae) with description of a new species. Novapex 14(4): 81-86
Résumé [+]
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The genus Phaenomenella is briefly reviewed. Phaenomenella vexabilis sp. nov. is described from deep-water off Taiwan. It is compared with P. mokenorum Fraussen, 2008 and P. inflata (Shikama, 1971). The shell shape and the spiral sculpture serve to distinguish the single known broken shell from all other known Phaenomenella species.
Campagnes accessibles citées (3) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Fraussen K. & Stahlschmidt P. 2016. The extensive Indo-Pacific deep-water radiation of Manaria E. A. Smith, 1906 (Gastropoda: Buccinidae) and related genera, with descriptions of 21 new species, in Héros V., Strong E.E. & Bouchet P.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 29. Mémoires du Muséum national d’Histoire naturelle 208. Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris:363-456, ISBN:978-2-85653-774-9
Résumé [+]
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The tropical deep-water Cominellinae commonly assigned to the genera Manaria E. A. Smith, 1906 and Eosipho Thiele, 1929 are revised. While the taxonomic details at the generic level were discussed by Kantor et al. (2013), the species level is discussed here. Twentyone new species are described: Manaria astrolabis n. sp. (French Polynesia), M. borbonica n. sp. (Réunion), M. circumsonaxa n. sp. (Papua New Guinea and the Solomons), M. corindoni n. sp. (Indonesia), M. corporosis n. sp. (the Solomons, Vanuatu, Coral Sea and New Caledonia), M. explicibilis n. sp. (Papua New Guinea and the Solomons), M. excalibur n. sp. (Indonesia and Western Australia), M. fluentisona n. sp. (the Solomons, Fiji, Wallis and Tonga), M. hadorni n. sp. (Papua New Guinea and New Caledonia), M. indomaris n. sp. (India), M. loculosa n. sp. (Fiji), M. lozoueti n. sp. (North Fiji Basin), M. terryni n. sp. (Mozambique Channel), M. tongaensis n. sp. (Tonga), M. tyrotarichoides n. sp. (Mozambique Channel), Calagrassor bacciballus n. sp. (Philippines), C. delicatus n. sp. (New Zealand), C. hespericus n. sp. (Mozambique), C. pidginoides n. sp. (Philippines, Papua New Guinea, the Solomons and Vanuatu), Enigmaticolus marshalli n. sp. (Kermadec Ridge, Monowai Caldera), and E. voluptarius n. sp. (New Caledonia). Considerable range extensions are recorded: Manaria kuroharai Azuma, 1960 is recorded from the Solomons, New Caledonia, Vanuatu and Tonga; M. brevicaudata (Schepman, 1911) is recorded from Taiwan, the Philippines, the Solomons and Fiji; and Calagrassor poppei (Fraussen, 2001) is recorded from Indonesia and the Solomons. Lathyrus jonkeri Koperberg, 1931, a fossil described from Indonesia, is recorded from the Recent fauna of Indonesia, Philippines and Fiji and is redescribed and placed in Manaria. Sipho jonkeri Koperberg, 1931, another fossil described from Indonesia in the same work, is a secondary homonym of Manaria jonkeri (Koperberg, 1931) and is renamed Manaria koperbergae nom. nov.
Campagnes accessibles citées (51) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
Restreint,
BIOPAPUA,
BOA0,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CONCALIS,
CORAIL 2,
CORINDON 2,
Restreint,
Restreint,
Restreint,
EBISCO,
HALIPRO 1,
KARUBAR,
MAINBAZA,
MIRIKY,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SALOMONBOA 3,
SANTO 2006,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 6,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2004,
TARASOC,
TERRASSES,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Fraussen K., Chino M. & Stahlschmidt P. 2017. Two New Calagrassor (Gastropoda: Buccinidae) from Japan and Adjacent Waters. VENUS 75(1-4): 17–25. DOI:DOI: http://doi.org/10.18941/venus.75.1-4_17
Résumé [+]
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Two new species of the genus Calagrassor Kantor et al., 2013 are described. Calagrassor analogus n. sp. is distributed in Japan, the East China Sea and Taiwan, and has been previously confused with Aulacofusus hiranoi (Shikama, 1962). Differences in protoconch morphology serve to distinguish C. analogus n. sp. from A. hiranoi and differences in sculpture serve to distinguish this new species from C. aldermenensis (Powell, 1971) and C. hayashii (Shikama, 1971). A second and hitherto unknown species is described from Japanese waters as Calagrassor hagai n. sp. Differences in spiral and axial sculpture serve to distinguish it from other known species in the genus.
Campagnes accessibles citées (5) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Galea H.R. 2016. Notes on some sertulariid hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from the tropical western Pacific, with descriptions of nine new species. European Journal of Taxonomy 218: 1-52. DOI:10.5852/ejt.2016.218
Résumé [+]
[-]
Forty-three species of sertulariid hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Sertulariidae), collected from the tropical western Pacific (Taiwan, Philippines, New Caledonia, French Polynesia, Vanuatu, Fiji, Tonga, Solomon Islands) during various expeditions of the French Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos program, are discussed. Of these, nine are new to science: Gonaxia nova sp. nov., G. plumularioides sp. nov., Sertularella folliformis sp. nov., Se. plicata sp. nov., Se. pseudocatena sp. nov., Se. splendida sp. nov., Se. tronconica sp. nov., Se. tubulosa sp. nov., and Symplectoscyphus paucicatillus sp. nov. The subspecies Symplectoscyphus johnstoni (Gray, 1843) tropicus Vervoort, 1993 is raised to species but, in order to avoid the secondary homonymy with Sy. tropicus (Hartlaub, 1901), the replacement name, Sy. fasciculatus nom. nov., is introduced. The male and female gonothecae of Diphasia cristata Billard, 1920, the male gonothecae of Gonaxia elegans Vervoort, 1993, as well as the female gonothecae of Salacia macer Vervoort & Watson, 2003, are described for the first time. Additional notes on the morphology of several other species are provided. All taxa are illustrated, in most cases using figures drawn at the same scale, so as to highlight the differences between related species.
Campagnes accessibles citées (20) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BIOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
LITHIST,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 6,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IK (Cnidaires)
-
Hadorn R. & Fraussen K. 2005. Revision of the genus Granulifusus Kuroda & Habe 1954, with description of some new species (Gastropoda : Prosobranchia : Fasciolariidae). Archiv für Molluskenkunde 134(2): 129-171. DOI:10.1127/arch.moll/0003-9284/134/129-171
Résumé [+]
[-]
The genus Granulifusus is distributed over the upper continental shelves in the Indo-West Pacific. The 27 species (21 Recent, 6 fossil) are characterized and separated from Fusinus by a granulated surface sculpture, the Recent also by a small round operculum which does not fill the aperture. Fusus (Sipho) libratus Watson 1886 and Latirus staminatus Garrard 1966 are placed in Granulifusus, their transfer based on the above mentioned conchological characteristics and on radular evidence. Granulifusus niponicus (E.A. Smith 1879), G. kiranus Shuto 1958, G. rubrolineatus (Sowerby II 1870), G. staminatus (Garrard 1966) and G. libratus (Watson 1886) were collected during the Musorstom expeditions and the material is extensively reported on. G. bacciballus sp. nov. (North New Caledonia, 444-452 m), G. benjamini sp. nov. (Coral Sea, Chesterfield, 400 m), G. balbus sp. nov. (South New Caledonia, 470 m), G. amoenus sp. nov. (Vanuatu, 480-544 m), G. geometricus sp. nov. (Tonga Islands, 427-436 m), G. monsecourorum sp. nov. (Madagascar, 240 m) and G. babae sp. nov. (Indonesia, Tanimbar Islands, 206-210 m) were also collected by the Musorstom expeditions and are added to this fauna and described as new species. From the collection of the Australian Museum, Sydney (AMS), one additional Recent species (G. lochi sp. nov., Western Australia, 301-310 m) and one fossil species (G. nakasiensis sp. nov., Nakasi Sandstone Beds, Late Pliocene, Fiji) are described. Lots of the remaining 8 species are studied with the exception of G. captivus (E.A. Smith 1899). The remaining 5 fossil species are listed and compared. G. rufinodis (Von Martens 1901) is tentatively regarded as a distinct species and a lectotype is selected.
Campagnes accessibles citées (32) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHEDI,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
CORINDON 2,
HALICAL 1,
HALIPRO 2,
KARUBAR,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
NORFOLK 1,
SMIB 1,
SMIB 2,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 8,
SMIB 9,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
VAUBAN 1978-1979
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Hadorn R. & Fraussen K. 2006. Five new species of Fusinus (Gastropoda: Fasciolariidae) from western Pacific and Arafura Sea. Novapex 7(4): 91-102
Résumé [+]
[-]
A number of Fusinus species from Indo-West Pacific deep water are studied. Five new species are added to this fauna: F. inglorius sp. nov. (Taiwan, off Tashi, 505-680 m), F. flavicomus sp. nov. (Taiwan, off Tashi, 145-200 m), F. wallacei sp. nov. (Indonesia, Tanimbar Islands, 365-368 m), F. alcyoneum sp. nov. (southern New Caledonia, 513 m) and F. thermariensis sp. nov. (Volcans Hunter and Matthews, 325-400 m). Four species are know by only specimen each and are recorded as separate species but not described as new.
Campagnes accessibles citées (21) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
CHALCAL 2,
HALICAL 1,
KARUBAR,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
NORFOLK 1,
SMIB 10,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Hayashi K.I. 2006. A new species of the Pasiphaea sivado species group from Taiwan (decapoda: Caridea: Pasiphaeidae). Zoosystema 28(2): 341-346
Résumé [+]
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During a survey of Taiwanese waters a new species, Pasiphae mclaughlinae n. sp., was discovered. This new species belongs to the P. sivado species group which is characterized by having a reduced branchial formula. The new species can be distinguished from other members of this group by the combination of the following characters: flat dorsal surface of the second to f ifth abdominal somites, unarmed basis and ischium of the second pereopods, and a lower number of meral spines on the first and second pereopods.
Campagnes accessibles citées (1) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Hayashi K.I. 2006. Revision of the Pasiphaea alcocki species group (Crustacea, Decapoda, Pasiphaeidae), in Richer de forges B. & Justine J.L.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 24. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 193:193-241, ISBN:2-85653-585-2
Résumé [+]
[-]
The Pasiphaea alcocki species group is treated herewith, as the third group of the genus Pasiphaea Savigny, 1816. The group is primarily
characterized by a deeply concave posterior margin of the telson and the distinctly carinate dorsal margin of the carapace and abdomen. The meri of the first and second pereopods are always armed with many spines, and the ischium and/or basis of the second pereopods are sometimes armed with spines. The group comprises 17 species including two new species both from MUSORSTOM material, Pasiphaea ledoyeri n. sp. and Pasiphaea major n. sp., which are large size species. P. berentsae Kensley, Tranter & Griffin, 1987 is proved to be a junior synonym of P. barnardi Yaldwyn, 1971. P. balssi Burukovsky&Romensky, 1987 is probably a junior synonym of P. rathbunae (Stebbing 1914a). A key to the species of P. alcocki group is presented. Each species is diagnosed and most species are redescribed and/or figured.
Campagnes accessibles citées (11) [+]
[-]
BIOCAL,
BORDAU 2,
CORINDON 2,
HALIPRO 1,
HALIPRO 2,
MD03 (ICHTYO),
MD08 (BENTHOS),
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 9,
TAIWAN 2001
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Ho P.H., Ng P.K., Chan T. & Lee D.A. 2004. New records of 31 species of brachyuran crabs from the joint Taiwan-France expeditions," Taiwan 2000" and" Taiwan 2001", off deep waters in Taiwan. Crustaceana 77(6): 641-688
Résumé [+]
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In recent collections from deep waters around Taiwan, numerous new records of brachyuran crabs were obtained for Taiwan. Thirty-one species are added to the known Taiwanese brachyuran fauna, including 13 new records of genera and two new records of families (Homolodromiidae and Cymonomidae). The established brachyuran crab fauna for Taiwan now stands at 604 species.
Campagnes accessibles citées (2) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Houart R. & Buge B.. Noteworthy and New Muricidae (Gastropoda) Collected in the East and South China Seas and off Taiwan. : 23
Résumé [+]
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Recent expeditions to the China Seas and off Taiwan have resulted in new geographical extensions and new species discoveries in the Muricidae: Abyssotrophon weijencheni n. sp. and Enixotrophon petalospeira n. sp. (Pagodulinae), Scabrotrophon fedosovi n. sp. (Trophoninae) and Siphonochelus hasegawai Houart, Buge & Zuccon, 2021 (Typhinae). A distribution map for each listed species completes the information. Additional information is given for Enixotrophon ziczac (Tiba, 1981) from Japan, not collected during these expeditions but compared with one of the new species described herein.
Campagnes accessibles citées (9) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Houart R. 2013. The genus Daphnellopsis (Gastropoda: Muricidae) in the Recent and quaternary of the Indo-West Pacific province. Journal of Conchology 41(4): 465-480
Résumé [+]
[-]
The muricid genus Daphnellopsis Schepman 1913 is revised and maintained in the subfamily Ergalataxinae, waiting for eventual genetic studies. Six species are included, D. fimbriata (Hinds 1843), D. lamellosa Schepman 1913 (type species), D. hypselos Houart 1995 and three new species described herein: D. lozoueti n. sp.; and D. pinedai n. sp., both from the Quaternary (Upper Pleistocene) of Santo, Vanuatu, and D. lochi n. sp. A Recent species of Western Australia. All the species are described or re-described, illustrated and compared with each other, their geographical range is given and illustrated on a map. The protoconchs of five species are illustrated as well as some details of the shells. A jaw is pointed out for the first time in D. fimbriata and is illustrated by scanning electron microscope (SEM) images.
Campagnes accessibles citées (14) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 4,
BIOGEOCAL,
BOA1,
MIRIKY,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 3,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SANTO 2006,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2001
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Iwamoto T., Nakayama N., Shao K.T. & Ho H.C. 2015. Synopsis of the grenadier fishes (Gadiformes; Teleostei) of Taiwan. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences 62(3): 31–126
Résumé [+]
[-]
Species of grenadier fishes (Order Gadiformes) in Taiwan are reviewed. The species list of Shao et al. (2008) is revised. A total 71 species in 21 genera and 3 families is recognized, including 5 species that are tentatively identified and 5 species, Coelorinchus hexafasciatus, C. cf. macrorhynchus, C. cf. notatus, Hymenocephalus papyraceus, and Ventrifossa sazonovi, that are first records for Taiwan. Ventrifossa fusca is recognized as a junior synonym of V. misakia. Keys to families, genera and species are provided. Species descriptions are based mainly on Taiwanese specimens but supplemented with specimens from various other sources. Figures of species firstly reported by Shao et al. (2008) are provided.
Campagnes accessibles citées (3) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IC (Ichtyologie)
-
Kim J.N. & Chan T. 2005. A revision of the genus Prionocrangon (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea: Crangonidae). Journal of Natural History 39(19): 1597-1625. DOI:10.1080/00222930400016788
Résumé [+]
[-]
Additional specimens belonging to the rare crangonid genus Prionocrangon Wood-Mason and Alcock, 1891 collected from recent deep-sea expeditions in the West Pacific enable a revision of this poorly known genus. The four previously described species are all valid. The type species P. ommatosteres Wood-Mason and Alcock, 1891, originally known only from the Andaman Sea, is considered to be also distributed in the Philippines and Indonesia. However, the material previously assigned to "P. ommatosteres'' by de Man ( 1920) and Chace ( 1984) from Indonesia and the Philippines actually represents a new species, P. demani sp. nov., close to P. pectinata Faxon, 1896. Prionocrangon pectinata and P. curvicaulis Yaldwyn, 1960 are still only known by their types. The distribution of P. dofleini Balss, 1913 is now extended from Japan to Taiwan. Two more new species are recognized. Prionocrangon formosa sp. nov. from Taiwan is closely related to P. curvicaulis while P. paucispina sp. nov. from Taiwan and New Caledonia is unique in having very few dorsal carapace spines. The genus Prionocrangon is newly diagnosed and a key to the species is provided. Nevertheless, a damaged specimen from the Sulu Sea could not be satisfactorily assigned to any of the above seven species, suggesting that this genus may have even higher diversity.
Campagnes accessibles citées (7) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Komai T. 2006. Revision of the Glyphocrangon caeca species group (Crustacea, Decapoda, Glyphocrangonidae), in Richer de forges B. & Justine J.L.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 24. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 193:243-264, ISBN:2-85653-585-2
Résumé [+]
[-]
A review of the species of the Glyphocrangon caeca Wood-Mason & Alcock, 1891 group is presented based on samples obtained during French expeditions to the southwestern Pacific and western Indian Ocean, and supplemented with materials deposited in various museums and institutions in the world. Eight species are now recognized in this species group. The two previously described species, G. caeca from the Bay of Bengal and G. cerea Alcock & Anderson, 1894 from the Laccadive Sea, are rediagnosed based on literature, as types or supplemental topotypic specimens of these two species have not been available for study. Six new species are described: G. brevis n. sp. from Madagascar, G. demani n. sp. from Indonesia, G. humilis n. sp. from Japan and Taiwan, G. musorstomia n. sp. from Wallis and Futuna Islands, Vanuatu, Fiji and Chesterfield Islands, G. parviocullus n. sp. from New Caledonia, and G. rudis n. sp. from the Solomon Islands. Species of this group occur exclusively in the Indo-West Pacific. The horizontal and bathymetric distributions of the species are briefly summarized. The available data suggests that species of the group are highly localized.
Campagnes accessibles citées (12) [+]
[-]
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
HALIPRO 1,
HALIPRO 2,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
SALOMON 1,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Komai T. 2008. A world-wide review of species of the deep-water crangonid genus Parapontophilus Christoffersen, 1988 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Caridea), with descriptions of ten new species. Zoosystema 30(2): 261-332
Résumé [+]
[-]
A review of species of the genus Parapontophilus Christoffersen, 1988 (Decapoda, Caridea, Crangonidae) from the world oceans is presented. This Study is based on the large collection obtained during French expeditions in the eastern Atlantic, western Indian, and tropical western and southern Pacific oceans, and on additional material from various museums and institutions in the world. Eighteen species, including ten new species, are divided in two informal species groups, P. gracilis (Smith, 1882) group and P modumanuensis (Rathbun, 1906) group. The first group contains I I species: P. gracilis (type species of the genus), P abyssi (Smith, 1884), P. junceus (Bate, 1888), P. profundus (Bate, 1888), P occidentalis (Faxon, 1893), P talismani (Crosnier & Forest, 1973), P cornutus n. sp., P cyrton n. sp., P difficilis n. sp., P. geminus n. sp. and P. longirostris n. sp. The second group contains seven species: P. modumanuensis (Rathbun, 1906), P. demani (Chace, 1984), P caledonicus n. sp., P. juxta n. sp., P. psyllus n. sp., P. sibogae n. sp. and P. stenorhinus in. sp. Six taxa originally described as full species by their authors and occasionally treated as subspecies, viz. P. gracilis, P abyssi, P. junceus, P. profundus, P occidentalis, and P talismani, are here maintained as full species because of the existence of morphological differences and of the partial overlap of geographical or bathymetrical ranges. All species are diagnosed or rediagnosed, and illustrated. Synonymies of Pontophilus challengeri Ortmann, 1893 with Parapontophilus abyssi and of Pontophilus occidentalis var. indica de Man, 1918 with Parapontophilus junceus were con firmed. A key to aid in the identification of all Parapontophilus species is given, although it should be used with caution because of intraspecific variations exhibited by many of the species. Bathymetrical and geographical distributions of species are also summarized. All but P. sibogae n. sp. are exclusively found at more than 200 in depth, and particularly three species, P. abyssi, P occidentalis, and P talismani, occur at abyssal depths exceeding 3000 m. Parapontophilus sibogae inhabits shallow water, recorded at depth of I I m in the type locality. Two species, P gracilis and P talismani, appear restricted to the Atlantic Ocean, although widely distributed there. Three species, P abyssi, P longirostris n. sp., and P. juxta n. sp. occur in the Indian Ocean; P abyssi is also widely distributed in the Atlantic and P longirostris extends to the central Pacific. Parapontophilus occidentalis appears restricted to the eastern Pacific. Other species are distributed in the range of the western Pacific to French Polynesia.
Campagnes accessibles citées (39) [+]
[-]
Restreint,
Restreint,
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BENTHEDI,
BIOCAL,
Restreint,
Restreint,
BIOGEOCAL,
BORDAU 2,
CORINDON 2,
Restreint,
HALIPRO 1,
HALIPRO 2,
Restreint,
KARUBAR,
MD20 (SAFARI),
MD28 (SAFARI II),
MD32 (REUNION),
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
PANGLAO 2005,
Restreint,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2003,
TAIWAN 2004,
Restreint
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Komai T., Lin C.W. & Chan T.Y. 2012. Bathypelagic Shrimp of the Genus Pasiphaea (Decapoda: Caridea: Pasiphaeidae) from Waters Around Taiwan, with Descriptions of Four New Species. Journal of Crustacean Biology 32(2): 295-325. DOI:10.1163/193724011X615550
Résumé [+]
[-]
The bathypelagic shrimp genus Pasiphaea Savigny, 1816 (Caridea: Pasiphaeidae) has been previously known from Taiwan from only three species. However, recent deep-sea surveys around the island have collected numerous specimens comprising ten species, of which four are new to science: P. aeons n. sp., P alcocki (Wood-Mason and Alcock, 1891), P exilimanus n. sp., P. falx n. sp., P japonica Omori, 1976, P. mclaughlinae Hayashi, 2006, P levicarinata Hanamura, 1994, P orientalis Schmitt, 1931, P. sirenkoi Burukovsky, 1987 and P. taiwanica n. sp. The four new species are fully described and illustrated, and compared with allied congeners. Pasiphaea orientalis is redescribed, as this species is endemic to Taiwan and its original description is inadequate. Amongst the three new records of Taiwan, P. levicarinata is also recorded for the first time from the northwestern Pacific.
Campagnes accessibles citées (4) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Kool H.H. 2004. Nassarius boucheti spec. nov., a deep water species from the western Pacific (Gastropoda, Prosobranchia, Nassariidae). Basteria 67(4-6): 135-139
Résumé [+]
[-]
A new Nassarius deep water species is described from the western Pacific. The material was collected during several expeditions of the Museum national d'Histoire nature lie, Paris.
Campagnes accessibles citées (17) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 4,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
HALIPRO 1,
MONTROUZIER,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 8,
Restreint,
TAIWAN 2001,
VAUBAN 1978-1979
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Kool H.H. 2008. On the identity of Nassarius castus (Gould, 1850), with the description of Nassarius multivocus n. sp. from the western Pacific. (Gastropoda: Buccinoidea: Nassariidae). Miscellanea Malacologica 3(2): 13-20
Résumé [+]
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Nassarius castus (Gould, 1850) is a species with a supposedly wide distribution in the Indo-West Pacific. Study of the holotype, however, shows that N. castus is a species restricted to the Fiji Islands and that several species figured as N. castus have been misidentified. Among these is a common species from the northwestern Pacific. This species got various other names in literature but has never been described in a valid way. Here it is described as Nassarius multivocus n. sp.
Campagnes accessibles citées (5) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Lemaitre R. 2004. A review of Strobopagurus Lemaitre, 1989 (Crustacea: decapoda: Paguroidea: Parapaguridae), with description of a new species. Scientia Marina 68(3): 355-372
Résumé [+]
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Species of the parapagurid genus Strobopagurus Lemaitre, 1989 are reviewed based primarily on abundant specimens obtained during French campaigns across the Indo-Pacific region. A new species, S. breviacus, is described. The genus contains two other species, S. gracilipes (A. Milne-Edwards, 1891), the type of the genus, and S. sibogae (de Saint Laurent, 1972). One taxon, Parapagurus kilburni Kensley, 1973, originally described from off eastern Africa, has been found to be a junior synonym of S. sibogae. An updated diagnosis of the genus, and diagnoses and comparative illustrations of all three species, are presented together with a key to aid in their identification. Information on live coloration is provided for S. gracilipes and S. sibogae; live coloration of S. breviacus is not known.
Campagnes accessibles citées (35) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BENTHEDI,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
HALIPRO 1,
LIFOU 2000,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 8,
NORFOLK 1,
PALEO-SURPRISE,
SALOMON 1,
SMIB 10,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2003,
VAUBAN 1978-1979,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Lemaitre R. 2013. The genus Paragiopagurus Lemaitre, 1996 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Anomura, Paguroidea, Parapaguridae): A worldwide review and summary, with descriptions of five new species, in Ahyong S.T., Chan T.Y., Corbari L. & Ng P.K.(Eds), Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos 27. Mémoires du Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle 204:311-421, ISBN:978-2-85653-692-6
Résumé [+]
[-]
A review of the deep-water hermit crab species of the genus Paragiopagurus Lemaitre, 1996 from the world oceans is presented. The core specimen base for this study has come primarily from the abundant collections of species of this genus obtained during French campaigns over the last four decades, and complemented with numerous specimens from many other deep-sea expeditions and deposited in various museum holdings around the world. Paragiopagurus is one of the most speciose genus among the Parapaguridae Smith, 1882, although it is considered a phylogenetically heterogeneous assemblage and does not appear to have an apomorphy of its own. Bathymetrically, the species range in depth from 36 to 2034 m, although they occur most frequently between 200 and 1000 m. The species utilize as housing, gastropod shells (or rarely scaphopod shells, siliceous sponges, or hollow pieces of wood) that may or may not be colonized by actinians or zoanthids. In this review, 24 species are recognized, of which five are new, P. laperousei n. sp., P. orthotenes n. sp., P. oxychelos n. sp., P. trilineatus n. sp., and P. umbonatus n. sp. The new species are fully described and illustrated. All previously known species of the genus are diagnosed or redescribed, and previously published illustrations of important taxonomic characters assembled and complemented, when useful, with new illustrations. The treatment of each species includes a full synonymy, materials examined (type and non-types), colouration, habitat or type of housing used, distribution, and remarks on taxonomy and morphological affinities. Colour photographs are included for 14 of the species. Parapagurus curvispina de Saint Laurent, 1974, a species tentatively moved after its description to Sympagurus Smith, 1883 and then to Paragiopagurus, is herein transferred with certainty to Oncopagurus
Lemaitre, 1996. Parapagurus spinimanus Balss, 1911, a species that had been incorrectly placed in Paragiopagurus, is herein moved to Sympagurus. Parapagurus sculptochela Zarenkov, 1990, a taxon previously considered a junior synonym of Paragiopagurus boletifer (de Saint Laurent, 1972), is herein resurrected as a valid species of Paragiopagurus. The bathymetric and geographic distributions of Paragiopagurus species are summarized and briefly discussed, including a summary table, graph, and map with generalized distribution patterns.
Campagnes accessibles citées (52) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BENTHEDI,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BOA0,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
CORAIL 2,
CORINDON 2,
EBISCO,
HALICAL 1,
HALIPRO 1,
HALIPRO 2,
KARUBAR,
LITHIST,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SANTO 2006,
SMCB,
SMIB 10,
SMIB 2,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 5,
SMIB 6,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2003,
TAIWAN 2004,
VAUBAN 1978-1979,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Lemaitre R. 2014. A worldwide taxonomic and distributional synthesis of the genus Oncopagurus Lemaitre, 1996 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Anomura: Parapaguridae), with descriptions of nine new species. The Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 62: 210–301
Résumé [+]
[-]
A worldwide taxonomic and distributional synthesis of the deep-water hermit crab genus Oncopagurus
Lemaitre, 1996 is presented. This genus, originally defined for 10 species is set apart from other Parapaguridae as well as other Paguroidea, by one synapomorphy: the presence of an upwardly curved epistomial spine. This study is based on a large amount of specimens deposited in major museums and collected during deep-sea sampling across the world oceans since the late 1800s, with the bulk of material coming from French campaigns in the Indo-Pacific, central and south Pacific during the last 40 years. A total of 24 species are recognised in this investigation, nine of which are new and fully described and illustrated. All previously known species are diagnosed or re-described, including figures assembled from recent published accounts or newly illustrated, of the most important morphological features useful for identifi cations. Information for each species includes a synonymy (full or abbreviated if a synonymy has recently been published), material examined (type and non-types), variations when signifi cant, colouration when available, habitat or type of housing used, distribution, and remarks on taxonomy and morphological affinities. Rare colour photographs are included for five species. Species of Oncopagurus range in depth from the Continental Shelf (50 m) to the Continental Rise (2308 m), although they are most commonly found in 50–500 m. Individuals of the majority of species in this genus are minute in size (< 3 mm in shield length), species differ in subtle morphological characters, and often exhibit the same broad morphological variations related to sex and size that has been documented in species of other genera of Parapaguridae. Oncopagurus mironovi Zhadan, 1997, a taxon reported from the Nazca and Sala-y-Gómez Ridges, is considered a junior synonym of the widely distributed O. indicus (Alcock, 1905). The bathymetric and geographic distributions of Oncopagurus species are summarised and briefly discussed, complemented with a summary table, graph, and map with generalised distribution patterns. The scant phylogenetic knowledge of this genus is summarised.
Campagnes accessibles citées (46) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BENTHEDI,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BOA0,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
CORINDON 2,
EBISCO,
HALIPRO 1,
KARUBAR,
LITHIST,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SANTO 2006,
SMCB,
SMIB 10,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 4,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2003,
TAIWAN 2004,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Lin C.W., Chan T. & Chu K.H. 2004. A New Squat Lobster of the Genus Raymunida (Decapoda: Galatheidae) from Taiwan. JOURNAL OF CRUSTACEAN BIOLOGY 24(1): 149-156
Résumé [+]
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The galatheid genus Raymunida Macpherson and Machordom, 2000, is reported for the first time from Taiwan, and the species collected is also new to science. The new species is most closely related to R. confundens Macpherson and Machordom, 2001, but differs in having a more robust cheliped and walking legs covered with distinct squammae. ne coloration of the new species is probably unique in the germs by both the carapace and abdomen being uniform in color. Analysis of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I gene sequences also supports the specific status of this Taiwanese form.
Campagnes accessibles citées (3) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Lin F.J. & Komai T. 2006. A new calocaridid shrimp of the genus Calaxiopsis Sakai & de Saint Laurent, 1989 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Thalassinidea) from deep waters off Taiwan. Zoosystema 28(2): 399-408
Résumé [+]
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An undescribed species of the rare thalassinidean genus Calaxiopsis Sakai & de Saint Laurent, 1989 was found in samples obtained during a recent deep-sea survey off Taiwan. The new species, Calaxiopsis mclaughlinae n. sp., is unique within the genus in that the rostrum and telson each bear only one pair of spines, and in that the carapace bears a distinct median carina extending from the base of the rostrum to the cervical groove.
Campagnes accessibles citées (2) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Lin F.J., Komai T. & Chan T.Y. 2007. A new species of callianassid shrimp (Crustacea: Decapoda: Thalassinidea) from deep-water hydrothermal vents off Taiwan. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington 120(2): 143-158. DOI:10.2988/0006-324X(2007)120[143:ANSOCS]2.0.CO;2
Résumé [+]
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Nihonotrypaea thermophila, new species, is described on the basis of 26 specimens from a hydrothermally influenced field off northeastern Taiwan at depths of 128–320 m. This is the first callianassid shrimp to be reported from deep-water hydrothermal vents, and available data seems to suggest that the new species is vent-endemic. The new species is assigned to Nihonotrypaea Manning & Tamaki, 1998, a genus including three previously described species inhabiting coastal mud or sand flat areas in Japan and its adjacent waters. The new species is unique in the genus in having the antennal peduncle distinctly longer than the antennular peduncle.
Campagnes accessibles citées (1) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Macpherson E. & Chan T.Y. 2008. Some lithodid crabs (Crustacea: Decapoda: Lithodidae) from Taiwan and adjacent waters, with the description of one new species from Guam. Zootaxa 1924: 43-52
Résumé [+]
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Seven species of Lithodid crabs were collected during cruises off Taiwan and Guam. One new species, Lithodes paulayi is described and illustrated. Neolithodes nipponensis, Lithodes sp., Paralomis arae, P. dofleini and P. truncatispinosa are reported from these islands for the first time, extending the distributional range in each case. Lithodes paulayi closely resembles L. longispina Sakai, 1971, from off Japan and the central Pacific, but can be differentiated by the branchial region possessing two long dorsal spines and only one long marginal spine, whereas L. longispina has only one long dorsal spine, situated at level of cardiac spines, and two long marginal spines. The description of a juvenile of P. arae Macpherson, 2001, is also included.
Campagnes accessibles citées (2) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Naruse T. & Hashimoto J. 2014. Description of a new species of the genus Trichopeltarion A. Milne-Edwards, 1880 (Decapoda: Brachyura: Trichopeltariidae) from western Pacific and southeast Asian waters. Marine Biology Research 10(4): 391-399. DOI:10.1080/17451000.2013.814789
Résumé [+]
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The present study limits the distribution of a deep-sea crab, Trichopeltarion ovale Anderson, 1896, to the Indian Ocean, and describes a new species of what has been referred to as T. ovale from the western Pacific and southeast Asia. Trichopeltarion danieleae sp. nov. differs morphologically from allied congeners by a combination of characters of the carapace and ambulatory legs. The new species is also distinguished from two fossil Trichopeltarion species, T. huziokai (Imaizumi, 1951) and T. inflatus (Kato, 1996).
Campagnes accessibles citées (4) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Oskars T.R., Bouchet P. & Malaquias M.A.E. 2015. A new phylogeny of the Cephalaspidea (Gastropoda: Heterobranchia) based on expanded taxon sampling and gene markers. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 89: 130-150. DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2015.04.011
Campagnes accessibles citées (6) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Peter castro 2005. Crabs of the subfamily Ethusinae Guinot, 1977 (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura, Dorippidae) of the Indo-West Pacific region. Zoosystema 27(3): 499-600
Résumé [+]
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Brachyuran crabs belonging to the subfamily Ethusinae Guinot, 1977, family Dorippidae MacLeay, 1838, are adapted to carry bivalve shells or other objects on their backs by using the hooked dactyli of their last two pairs of pereopods (P4 and P5), which are dorsally located and mobile. Most species inhabit deep water and are infrequently collected. The taxonomy of the 57 known Indo-West Pacific species of ethusines is revised. The subfamily consists of three genera: Ethusa Roux, 1830, with 30 species of which four are being described as new, Ethusina Smith, 1884, with 25 species of which eight are new, and Parethusa Chen, 1997, with two species of which one is new. Ethusa and Ethusina are worldwide in distribution while Parethusa is exclusive to the Indo-West Pacific region. Seven nominal species described by other authors were found to be junior subjective synonyms of other species: Ethusa major Chen, 1993, of Ethusa orientalis Miers, 1886; Ethusa makasarica Chen, 1993, of Ethusa hirsuta McArdle, 1900; Ethusa madagascariensis Chen, 1987, of Ethusa zurstrasseni Doflein, 1904; Ethusina investigatoris (Alcock, 1896) and E. alcocki Ng & Ho, 2003, of Ethusina robusta Miers, 1886; Ethusina insolita Ng & Ho, 2003, of Ethusina dilobotus Chen, 1993; and Ethusina saltator Ng & Ho, 2000, of Ethusina paralongipes Chen, 1993.
Campagnes accessibles citées (39) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
CORAIL 2,
CORINDON 2,
Restreint,
HALIPRO 1,
KARUBAR,
LAGON,
LIFOU 2000,
MD20 (SAFARI),
MD28 (SAFARI II),
MD32 (REUNION),
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
PANGLAO 2004,
SALOMON 1,
SMIB 6,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TAIWAN 2003
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Sumner-rooney L., Sigwart J.D., Mcafee J., Smith L. & Williams S.T. 2016. Repeated eye reduction events reveal multiple pathways to degeneration in a family of marine snails. Evolution 70(10): 2268-2295. DOI:10.1111/evo.13022
Résumé [+]
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Eye reduction occurs in many troglobitic, fossorial, and deep-sea animals but there is no clear consensus on its evolutionary mechanism. Given the highly conserved and pleiotropic nature of many genes instrumental to eye development, degeneration might be expected to follow consistent evolutionary trajectories in closely related animals. We tested this in a comparative study of ocular anatomy in solariellid snails from deep and shallow marine habitats using morphological, histological, and tomographic techniques, contextualized phylogenetically. Of 67 species studied, 15 lack retinal pigmentation and at least seven have eyes enveloped by surrounding epithelium. Independent instances of reduction follow numerous different morphological trajectories. We estimate eye loss has evolved at least seven times within Solariellidae, in at least three different ways: characters such as pigmentation loss, obstruction of eye aperture, and “lens” degeneration can occur in any order. In one instance, two morphologically distinct reduction pathways appear within a single genus, Bathymophila. Even amongst closely related animals living at similar depths and presumably with similar selective pressures, the processes leading to eye loss have more evolutionary plasticity than previously realized. Although there is selective pressure driving eye reduction, it is clearly not morphologically or developmentally constrained as has been suggested by previous studies.
Campagnes accessibles citées (18) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
BIOPAPUA,
BOA1,
CONCALIS,
EBISCO,
EXBODI,
KARUBENTHOS 2012,
MAINBAZA,
MIRIKY,
NORFOLK 2,
PANGLAO 2004,
PANGLAO 2005,
PAPUA NIUGINI,
SALOMON 2,
SANTO 2006,
TAIWAN 2001,
TARASOC,
TERRASSES
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Tavares M. & Cleva R. 2010. Trichopeltariidae (Crustacea, Decapoda, Brachyura), a new family and superfamily of eubrachyuran crabs with description of one new genus and five new species. Papéis Avulsos de Zoologia (São Paulo) 50(9): 97-157
Campagnes accessibles citées (15) [+]
[-]
BOA0,
BOA1,
CORINDON 2,
KARUBAR,
MUSORSTOM 1,
MUSORSTOM 2,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 7,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SALOMONBOA 3,
SMCB,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Tu T.H., Dai C.F. & Jeng M.S. 2012. Precious corals (Octocorallia: Coralliidae) from the northern West Pacific region with descriptions of two New Species. Zootaxa 3395(1): 1–17
Résumé [+]
[-]
Members of the family Coralliidae, known as precious corals, are ecologically and economically important deep sea organisms. However, these organisms are currently threatened by commercial harvesting. In order to create and implement effective conservative strategies, taxonomic knowledge of conservative targets is necessary, but unfortunately the taxonomy of precious corals in this family is still ambiguous. This study provides a review of 15 Coralliidae species from the northern West Pacific region and a key to species identification. In addition, descriptions of two new species, Corallium carusrubrum n. sp. and C. taiwanicum n. sp., as well as a redescription of C. sulcatum Kishinouye, 1903 are included. Corallium carusrubrum n. sp. is distributed on seamounts off northeastern Taiwan. The autozooids of C. carusrubrum n. sp. are retractile and each can be fully withdrawn into the cortex thereby causing a mound on the surface which is short and cylindrical rather than typically hemispherical; additionally, there are no long spindles in their tentacles. Corallium taiwanicum n. sp. is distributed in an area off southwestern Taiwan. It has special unique 8-radiates with an oval shape and large projections. Corallium sulcatum is distributed from an area off southwestern Taiwan to western Japan. It has been harvested and traded for decades, but there were no illustrations in its original description, hence a redescription of this species is provided.
Campagnes accessibles citées (2) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IK (Cnidaires)
-
Vilvens C. & Héros V. 2005. New species and new records of Danilia (Gastropoda: Chilodontidae) from the western Pacific. Novapex 6(3): 53-64
Résumé [+]
[-]
New records of Danilia species from the West-Pacific are listed. Danilia angulosa n. sp., D. galeata n. sp. and D; discordata n. sp. are described and compared with similar Danilia species. A key to wetern Pacific Danilia species, including the new species, is proposed. the recent worldwide species of Danilia, the number of which reach now therefore 11, are listed with their main distinctive features in an appendix.
Campagnes accessibles citées (14) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 4,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
KARUBAR,
LAGON,
LIFOU 2000,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
SALOMON 1,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Vilvens C. 2017. New species and new records of Chilodontidae (Gastropoda: Vetigastropoda: Seguenzioidea) from the Pacific Ocean. Novapex 18(HS 11): 1-67
Résumé [+]
[-]
New records of Chilodontidae species described from various Pacific localities are listed, extending their distribution.
15 new species are described from New Caledonia, Fiji, French Polynesia, Solomon Islands and Taiwan, and compared with similar species: Vaceuchelus cavernoides n. sp., V. phaios n. sp., V. rapaensis n. sp., Herpetopoma pantantoi n. sp., H. vitilevuense n. sp., H. hivaoaense n. sp., Euchelus polysarkon n. sp., Ascetostoma pteroton n. sp., Clypeostoma chranos n. sp., C. adelon n. sp., Pholidotrope asteroeides n. sp., P. choiseulensis n. sp., Danilia stroggylon n. sp., Perrinia cantharidoides n. sp. and P. guadalcanalensis n. sp.
Two new synonymies are established: Vaceuchelus saguili Poppe, Tagaro & Dekker, 2006 from the Philippines is synonymized with V. favosus (Melvill & Standen, 1896), and V. vangoethemi Poppe, Tagaro & Dekker, 2006 from the Philippines is synonymized with V. clathratus (A.Adams, 1853)
Campagnes accessibles citées (49) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BENTHAUS,
BERYX 11,
BIOCAL,
BIOGEOCAL,
BOA0,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CHALCAL 1,
CHALCAL 2,
CONCALIS,
CORAIL 2,
EBISCO,
KARUBAR,
LAGON,
LIFOU 2000,
Restreint,
MONTROUZIER,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 3,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
MUSORSTOM 9,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
PALEO-SURPRISE,
PANGLAO 2004,
PANGLAO 2005,
RAPA 2002,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SALOMONBOA 3,
SANTO 2006,
SMIB 3,
SMIB 8,
Restreint,
Restreint,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
VAUBAN 1978-1979,
VOLSMAR
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Vilvens C. & Williams S.T. 2020. New species of Ilanga (Gastropoda: Trochoidea: Solariellidae) from the Indo-West Pacific. Zootaxa 4732(2): 201-257. DOI:10.11646/zootaxa.4732.2.1
Résumé [+]
[-]
In this study we list and figure a total of 22 species assigned to the genus Ilanga Herbert, 1987 that were collected during recent Paris Museum expeditions, of which 16 are new and described here (listed in the order they appear in the text): Ilanga herberti n. sp., I. euryomphalos n. sp., I. polygramma n. sp., I. stephanophora n. sp., I. harrytaylori n. sp., I. eurystoma n. sp., I. oxeia n. sp., I. cosmia n. sp., I. corrineae n. sp., I. comes n. sp., I. dongshaensis n. sp., I. philia n. sp., I. helicoides n. sp., I. lauensis n. sp., I. mesembrine n. sp. and I. boreia n. sp.. These species occur throughout the Indo-West Pacific, extending the known range of this genus beyond the south west Indian Ocean. We also synonymise Microgaza fulgens Dall, 1907 and Microgaza konos Vilvens, 2009 (syn. nov.) (as I. fulgens). New combinations include Ilanga fulgens and I. navakaensis.
Campagnes accessibles citées (42) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
BATHUS 2,
BATHUS 3,
BATHUS 4,
BIOGEOCAL,
BIOPAPUA,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
BORDAU 2,
CONCALIS,
Restreint,
Restreint,
Restreint,
Restreint,
DongSha 2014,
EBISCO,
EXBODI,
KARUBAR,
KAVIENG 2014,
LAGON,
LIFOU 2000,
MAINBAZA,
MIRIKY,
MUSORSTOM 10,
MUSORSTOM 4,
MUSORSTOM 5,
MUSORSTOM 6,
MUSORSTOM 7,
MUSORSTOM 8,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
PANGLAO 2004,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
SALOMONBOA 3,
SANTO 2006,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2002,
TERRASSES,
VAUBAN 1978-1979,
ZhongSha 2015
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Vos C. & Terryn Y. 2007. The family Tonnidae. A conchological iconography ISBN:3-925919-27-9 978-3-925919-27-5 978-3-939767-00-8 3-939767-00-X
Résumé [+]
[-]
Before talking about a largely underestimated and poorly known, yet so beautiful family of Gastropoda, there is an issue which I must attract your attention to. While gathering the necessary information, shells and literature, I often wondered why people still call some of the Tonnidae by the wrong name, despite the sometimes meticulous research done by scientists in the past. Is it because of the often controversial information in the available publications? Is it for lack of decent information? This issue became clear to me when I was looking into the most recent publications on Eudolium such as Piani (1977), Marshall (1992) and Bouchet & Waren (1993). All concluded that what is usually sold as Eudolium pyriforme is in fact Monterosato 's true Eudolium crosseanum. I must say I was a bit shocked to read those papers and see some photographs of the type material. Why were erroneous names still used ifproofwas there, clearly and undoubtedly, to the contrary? It took me a few weeks and a few discussions with Dr Philippe Bouchet and Dr Alan Beu to figure it out, but in the end, the answer is simple: In scientific terms, proof is given by photography and description, and maybe by discussion, but not in such words or language that they are understandable to the untrained reader. Also, such research is often documented in broader publications (e.g. Bouchet & Waren, 1993; Beu, 2005) that don't attract the attention of the advanced amateur or naturalist straight away, and are wrongfully neglected. These works are seldom offered commercially, and thus unjustly remain unknown to the wider public. It is in this respect that works such as the Concho logical Iconography, often written by advanced naturalists, have their true value and Guido Poppe, Klaus Groh and Yves Terryn must be commended for an initiative such as this is an excellent medium to bring science and amateur collecting closer together in an attempt to cover the gap between the two. It is my ambition to give a synoptical overview ofthe existing (described) species, based on my collection of well over 1000 specimens and an ever-increasing library of historical as well as recent publications. Ten years of collecting and studying shells and publications have resulted in what is to follow. I have listed the most important synonyms for each species in order to clarify some of the dubious issues, but the lists are not exhaustive. Although I have many of the old publications through digital photography, I'm sure that there are still many more out there. And even if I was to spend another month in the libraries of, e.g. the BM(NH) or the MNHN, there will still be publications "hidden" somewhere. I mainly concentrate my research on Recent material, whilst a lot has been described in the fossil area as well. For example: recently, Dr Alan Beu discovered that there is an earlier name for what we all know as Eudolium pyriforme (G. B. Sowerby III, 1914), namely Eudolium javanum (Martin, 1879), originally described as the fossil Cassidariajavana from the late Miocene oflndonesia. While researching this, he also discovered names such as Dolhun hochstetteri Martin, 1879 (= Tonna allium (Dillwyn, 1817)) just to give one example. Another issue is interpretation. Many have interpreted, e.g. Adanson's "Le Minjac" in different ways. For one author, it is T. marginata (Philippi, 1845), for another author T. tessellata (Lamarck, 1816). March (1852) even lists it as a full species, D. minjac. In order to clarify such matters, I have tried to compare specimens with type material. This publication should be a solid basis for any future researcher in this family and I do hope you will all find the necessary answers to your basic tun-related questions to start that collection you always wanted to start.
Campagnes accessibles citées (13) [+]
[-]
BATHUS 1,
CHALCAL 1,
CORAIL 2,
HALIPRO 1,
LAGON,
LIFOU 2000,
MONTROUZIER,
MUSORSTOM 4,
PALEO-SURPRISE,
SMIB 8,
TAIWAN 2000,
TAIWAN 2001,
TAIWAN 2004
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Wang T.W., Komai T., Chen C.L. & Chan T.Y. 2016. Globospongicola jiaolongi Jiang, Kou & Li, 2015, a junior subjective synonym of G. spinulatus Komai & Saito, 2006 (Crustacea: Decapoda: Stenopodidea: Spongicolidae). Zootaxa 4072(5): 579-584. DOI:10.11646/zootaxa.4072.5.5
Campagnes accessibles citées (3) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IU (Crustacés)
-
Williams S.T. 2012. Advances in molecular systematics of the vetigastropod superfamily Trochoidea: Advances in systematics of Trochoidea. Zoologica Scripta 41(6): 571-595. DOI:10.1111/j.1463-6409.2012.00552.x
Résumé [+]
[-]
The gastropod superfamily Trochoidea Rafinesque, 1815 is comprised of a diverse range of species, including large and charismatic species of commercial value as well as many small or enigmatic taxa that are only recently being represented in molecular studies. This study includes the first sequences for rarely collected species from the genera Gaza Watson, 1879, Callogaza Dall, 1881, Antimargarita Powell, 1951 and Kaiparathina Laws, 1941. There is also greater taxon sampling of genera that have proved difficult to place in previous phylogenetic analyses, like Tectus Montfort, 1810, Tegula Lesson, 1832, Margarites Gray, 1847, Margarella Thiele, 1893 and trochoid skeneimorphs. There is also greater sampling of poorly represented families Solariellidae and Liotiidae. Bayesian analysis of combined gene data sets based on four (28S, 12S, 16S and COI) or five genes (plus 18S) suggests that there are eight, possibly nine families in Trochoidea including the families Margaritidae and Tegulidae, which are recognized for the first time at familial rank. Other trochoidean families confirmed are Calliostomatidae, Liotiidae, Skeneidae, Solariellidae, Trochidae and Turbinidae. A clade including Cittarium and the commercially important genera Rochia and Tectus may represent a possible ninth family, but this is not formally recognized or described here and awaits confirmation from further studies. Relationships among families were not generally well supported except in the 5-gene tree. In the 5-gene tree, Turbinidae, Liotiidae, Tegulidae, Cittarium, Rochia and Tectus form a well-supported clade consistent with the previous molecular and morphological studies linking these groups. This clade forms another well-supported clade with Margaritidae and Solariellidae. Trochidae is sister to Calliostomatidae with strong support. Subfamilial relationships within Trochidae are consistent with recent molecular studies, with the addition of one new subfamily, Kaiparathininae Marshall 1993 (previously a tribe). Only two subfamilies are recognized within Turbinidae, both with calcareous opercula: Prisogasterinae and Turbininae. Calliostomatidae includes a new subfamily Margarellinae. Its assignment to Calliostomatidae, although well supported by molecular evidence, is surprising considering morphological evidence.
Campagnes accessibles citées (10) [+]
[-]
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)
-
Williams S.T., Smith L., Herbert D.G., Marshall B.A., Warén A., Kiel S., Dyal P., Linse K., Vilvens C. & Kano Y. 2013. Cenozoic climate change and diversification on the continental shelf and slope: evolution of gastropod diversity in the family Solariellidae (Trochoidea). Ecology and Evolution 3(4): 887-917. DOI:10.1002/ece3.513
Résumé [+]
[-]
Recent expeditions have revealed high levels of biodiversity in the tropical deep-sea, yet little is known about the age or origin of this biodiversity, and large-scale molecular studies are still few in number. In this study, we had access to the largest number of solariellid gastropods ever collected for molecular studies, including many rare and unusual taxa. We used a Bayesian chronogram of these deep-sea gastropods (1) to test the hypothesis that deep-water communities arose onshore, (2) to determine whether Antarctica acted as a source of diversity for deep-water communities elsewhere and (3) to determine how factors like global climate change have affected evolution on the continental slope. We show that although fossil data suggest that solariellid gastropods likely arose in a shallow, tropical environment, interpretation of the molecular data is equivocal with respect to the origin of the group. On the other hand, the molecular data clearly show that Antarctic species sampled represent a recent invasion, rather than a relictual ancestral lineage. We also show that an abrupt period of global warming during the Palaeocene Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) leaves no molecular record of change in diversification rate in solariellids and that the group radiated before the PETM. Conversely, there is a substantial, although not significant increase in the rate of diversification of a major clade approximately 33.7Mya, coinciding with a period of global cooling at the EoceneOligocene transition. Increased nutrients made available by contemporaneous changes to erosion, ocean circulation, tectonic events and upwelling may explain increased diversification, suggesting that food availability may have been a factor limiting exploitation of deep-sea habitats. Tectonic events that shaped diversification in reef-associated taxa and deep-water squat lobsters in central Indo-West Pacific were also probably important in the evolution of solariellids during the Oligo-Miocene.
Campagnes accessibles citées (19) [+]
[-]
AURORA 2007,
BENTHAUS,
BERYX 11,
BIOPAPUA,
BOA1,
BORDAU 1,
CONCALIS,
EBISCO,
MAINBAZA,
MIRIKY,
NORFOLK 1,
NORFOLK 2,
PANGLAO 2004,
PANGLAO 2005,
SALOMON 1,
SALOMON 2,
TAIWAN 2001,
TARASOC,
TERRASSES
Codes des collections associés:
IM (Mollusques)