Pettibone, Marian H. (1970). Polychaeta Errantia of the Siboga Expedition. Part IV. Some additional polychaetes of the Polynoidae, Hesionidae, Nereidae, Goniadidae, Eunicidae, and Onuphidae, selected as new species by the late Dr. Hermann Augener with remarks on other related species, in M. Weber, L.F. Beaufort and J.H. Stock eds., Siboga-Expeditie Uitkomsten op Zoologisch, Bonatisch, Oceanographisch en Geologisch gebied verzameld in Nederlandsch Oost-Indiƫ 1899-1900. Leiden, E.J. Brill, p. 199-270.
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Pettibone, Marian H.
1970
Polychaeta Errantia of the Siboga Expedition. Part IV. Some additional polychaetes of the Polynoidae, Hesionidae, Nereidae, Goniadidae, Eunicidae, and Onuphidae, selected as new species by the late Dr. Hermann Augener with remarks on other related species, in M. Weber, L.F. Beaufort and J.H. Stock eds., Siboga-Expeditie Uitkomsten op Zoologisch, Bonatisch, Oceanographisch en Geologisch gebied verzameld in Nederlandsch Oost-Indiƫ 1899-1900
Leiden, E.J. Brill, p. 199-270.
Publication
Kristian Fauchald's Polychaeta DB
Available for editors
Before his death on April 5, 1938 (Klatt, 1939), the late Dr. Hermann Augener was working
on some additional errant polychaetes from the Siboga Expedition. The material had been identified
and a preliminary manuscript had been prepared. When Dr. Augener became seriously ill in the fall
of 1937, the collection was returned to the Zoological Museum in Amsterdam, along with the original
hand-written German manuscript. No figures had been prepared. Among the identified polychaetes
were some ten species which had been indicated as new, and one new genus. These specimens recently
were sent to me by Dr. S. van der Spoel, along with an English translation of the original manuscript.
Based on a restudy of this material, four of Augener's ten species are considered now to be new, and
two genera; these are indicated in the text with Augener and Pettibone as the authors. The other
six have been referred to previously described species, some of which were published within the
thirty years since Augener prepared his manuscript.