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MarBEF Data System |
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WoRMS name details
original description
Bailey, J.W. (1851). Microscopical observations made in South Carolina, Georgia and Florida. <em>Smithson. Contr. Knowl.</em> 2(8): 1-48., available online at https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.2007 [details]
original description
Bailey, J.W. (1851). Microscopical observations made in South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge, 2(8): 48 pp., pl. 1-3. page(s): p. 39; pl. 2, fig. 24, 25 [details]
basis of record
Hartley, B., Ross, R. & Williams, D.M. (1986). A check-list of the freshwater, brackish and marine diatoms of the British Isles and adjoining coastal waters. <em>Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom.</em> 66(3): 531-610. [details] Available for editors [request]
additional source
Fourtanier, E. & Kociolek, J. P. (compilers). (2011). Catalogue of Diatom Names. California Academy of Sciences, On-line Version. Updated 2011-09-19., available online at http://researcharchive.calacademy.org/research/diatoms/names/index.asp [details]
source of synonymy
Hartley, B., Ross, R. & Williams, D.M. (1986). A check-list of the freshwater, brackish and marine diatoms of the British Isles and adjoining coastal waters. <em>Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom.</em> 66(3): 531-610. [details] Available for editors [request]
Unreviewed
Environment "A fine, large, and very distinct species, which appears to be widely diffused in the estuaries of the United States. I first found it, several years ago, in the mud of the Hudson River, at West Point, and in mud from the harbor of New Haven, Conn. In Florida I found it at St. Augustine, Tampa, and quite abundant
at Enterprise. I also noticed it at Hopeton, on the Altamaha, in Georgia, and the mud from near New Orleans." [details]
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