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MarBEF Data System |
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WoRMS taxon details
original description
Carter, H.J. (1886). Description of a new species. The First Report upon the Fauna of Liverpool Bay and Neigbouring Seas. <em>LMBC Report.</em> 1: 92-94. page(s): 94 [details]
taxonomy source
Carter, H.J. (1886). Descriptions of Sponges from the Neighbourhood of Port Phillip Heads, South Australia, continued. <em>Annals and Magazine of Natural History.</em> (5) 18: 34-55, 126-149. page(s): 47 [details]
basis of record
Borojevic, R.; Boury-Esnault, N.; Manuel, M.; Vacelet, J. (2002). Order Leucosolenida Hartman, 1958. Pp. 1157-1184. <em>In: Hooper, J.N.A.; Van Soest, R.W.M. (eds) (2002). Systema Porifera: a guide to the classification of sponges. 2 volumes.</em> Kluwer Academic/Plenum, NY, 1708 + xvliii. ISBN 0-306-47260-0 (printed version). (look up in IMIS) [details] Available for editors [request]
basis of record
Borojevic, R.; Boury-Esnault, N.; Manuel, M.; Vacelet, J. (2002 [2004]). Order Leucosolenida Hartman, 1958. Pp. 1157-11884. <i>In:</i> Hooper, J.N.A. & Van Soest, R.W.M. (eds). <i>Systema Porifera - A guide to the classification of sponges</i>. (2 volumes) Kluwer Academic/ Plenum, NY, 1708+xvliii. ISBN 978-1-4615-0747-5 (eBook electronic version). [details] Available for editors [request]
additional source
Van Soest, R.W.M. (2001). Porifera, <b><i>in</i></b>: Costello, M.J. <i>et al.</i> (Ed.) (2001). <i>European register of marine species: a check-list of the marine species in Europe and a bibliography of guides to their identification</i>. <em>Collection Patrimoines Naturels.</em> 50: 85-103. (look up in IMIS) [details]
Present Inaccurate Introduced: alien Containing type locality
From editor or global species database
Taxonomy Remarkably, Carter (1886a) first described Aphroceras ramosa as a new species from the Liverpool area (UK) and in the discussion of this declared this new species to be a member of Heteropia, still to be properly described in a forthcoming Australian paper (Carter, 1886c). Since Aphroceras ramosa is the only species mentioned in the Liverpool paper and Heteropia is first used there, A. ramosa automatically becomes the type species, even though Carter did not mention the species ramosa in the 1886c paper. [details]
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