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MarBEF Data System |
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WoRMS name details
original description
(of Tryphosella abyssi Norman, 1900) Norman, A.M. (1900). British Amphipoda: Fam. Lysianassidae (Concluded). <em>Annals and Magazine of Natural History.</em> (ser. 7) 5, pp. 196-214; pl. 6. page(s): 205 [details]
context source (Deepsea)
Norman, A.M. (1900). British Amphipoda: Fam. Lysianassidae (Concluded). <em>Annals and Magazine of Natural History.</em> (ser. 7) 5, pp. 196-214; pl. 6. [details]
additional source
Lowry, J. K.; Kilgallen, N. M. (2014). A generic review of the lysianassoid family Uristidae and descriptions of new taxa from Australian waters (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Uristidae). <em>Zootaxa.</em> 3867(1): 1., available online at https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3867.1.1 [details] Available for editors [request]
status source
Horton, T.; Thurston, M. (2011). Centromedon zoe (Crustacea: Amphipoda: Lysianassoidea: Uristidae), a new deep-water scavenger species from the North Atlantic, with a key to the genus Centromedon. Zootaxa, 2869: 54–62, available online at http://www.mapress.com/zootaxa/2011/f/zt02869p062.pdf [details] Available for editors [request]
From editor or global species database
Taxonomic remark Lowry & Kilgallen (2014) in their revision of the family Uristidae, placed this taxon into incertae sedis (unknown family). [details]
Taxonomic remark Tryphosella abyssi Norman, 1900, included under Uristes by Barnard & Karaman (1991) has been recorded only once. A single 6 mm male specimen was collected at 1071 m in the ‘cold area of the Faroe Channel’ by Sir John Murray, aboard HMS Triton, in 1882 (Station 7: 60°19' N, 7°10' W). Type material of this species is not in the Norman Collection at the Natural History Museum. The description and illustrations given by Norman (1900), particularly of the sub-acute lateral cephalic lobes, the dominant upper lip, and the acute urosome boss, place it close to the new species Centromedon zoe. However, the Norman species is distinguished by the rounded posterodistal lobe of epimeron 3. Without type material, or further material that can be linked with this species it is hereby referred to nomen dubium. [details]
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