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WoRMS taxon details
original description
Audouin, J.V. and Milne Edwards, H. 1830. Description de l'Hipponoé, nouveau genre d'Annélides. Annales des sciences naturelles, Paris, Ser. série 1, 20: 156-159, Plate 3., available online at http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k57253336/f157.image.r=Annales%20des%20sciences%20naturelles.langEN page(s): 159 [details]
original description
(of Hipponoa Audouin & Milne Edwards, 1833) Audouin, J.V. and Milne Edwards, H. 1830. Description de l'Hipponoé, nouveau genre d'Annélides. Annales des sciences naturelles, Paris, Ser. série 1, 20: 156-159, Plate 3., available online at http://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k57253336/f157.image.r=Annales%20des%20sciences%20naturelles.langEN page(s): 159; note: Audouin & Milne-Edwards used Hipponoe in 1830 for the original description [details]
original description
(of Metamphinome Treadwell, 1940) Treadwell, Aaron L. 1940. A new genus and two new species of polychaetous annelids from Texas and one new species from the Philippine Islands. American Museum Novitates, 1089: 1-4. page(s): 1 [details]
additional source
Bellan, G. (2001). Polychaeta, <i>in</i>: Costello, M.J. <i>et al.</i> (Ed.) (2001). European register of marine species: a check-list of the marine species in Europe and a bibliography of guides to their identification. <em>Collection Patrimoines Naturels.</em> 50: 214-231. (look up in IMIS) [details]
additional source
Audouin, J.V. and Milne Edwards, H. (1833). [Part 2.] Classification des Annélides et description de celles qui habitent les côtes de la France. <em>Annales des sciences naturelles, Paris.</em> sér. 1, 28: 187-247., available online at https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/page/6096524 page(s): 202 [details]
status source
Borda, Elizabeth; Yáñez-Rivera, Beatriz; Ochoa, Gabriela M.; Kudenov, Jerry D.; Sanchez-Ortiz, Carlos; Schulze, Anja; Rouse, Greg W. (2015). Revamping Amphinomidae (Annelida: Amphinomida), with the inclusion of Notopygos. <em>Zoologica Scripta.</em> 44(3): 324-333., available online at https://doi.org/10.1111/zsc.12099 page(s): 330; note: included in Amphinominae (using spelling Hipponoa) [details]
Present Inaccurate Introduced: alien Containing type locality
From editor or global species database
Diagnosis Original diagnosis by Audouin & Milne-Edwards (1830: 159): ''Tête distincte et munie d'antennes; trompe dépourvue de mâchoires; pieds à une seule rame; point de caroncule ni de cirrhe dorsal; branchies en forme de houppes rameuses ou d'arbuscules fixées à la base supérieure des pieds.'' [details]
Etymology The name Hipponoe refers to a sea-nymph of the ancient Greek mythology, a nereid named ''the temper of horses'', that is, of waves, being the daughter of Nereus and Doris. Nymphs are minor rank deities associated with nature. Several nereid nymph names have been used for Polychaeta genera names. [details]
Grammatical gender Feminine. Hipponoe and the other nymphs are personified as young females in Greek myths. [details]
Homonymy Hipponoe Audouin & Milne-Edwards 1830 is senior to Hipponoe Gray, 1840 in Echinoidea (replaced by Tripneustes) [details]
Spelling Audouin & Milne-Edwards used Hipponoe in 1830 for the original description (only once without accent, and in the only binomen presented, otherwise using Hipponoé as in the article title, never Hipponoa) and then used Hipponoa in 1833. Hipponoa may be an attempted belated latinisation of French Hipponoé or just carelessness (fide Kudenov, 1994, they also later used Hyponné and Hipponoë (diaeresis e)). The name of the Greek nereid in English transliteration is Hipponoe. In recent years Hipponoa has been more used by taxonomists, but Nomenclator Zoologicus has only Hipponoe, a senior homonym to an echinoid Hipponoe genus, and many authors have used Hipponoe in Polychaeta, for example Quatrefages in vol 1 of his 1866 work and also Fauvel (monograph) and also Pettibone (1963), but Hartman (catalogue) and Day (monograph), and more recently Kudenov (1994) used Hipponoa. However, Hipponoa appears to be an unjustified spelling emendation to the original, and Hipponoe has continued to be much used throughout the taxonomic history of the monotypic species, H. gaudichaudi. In an ironic twist Amaral & Nonato (1994:378) comment that Hipponoa is a misspelling in Cuvier, 1832 but themselves accidentally use the misspelling "Hypponoe" multiple times. They state " HARTMAN (1959) refere Hipponoa, com a variante Hipponoe, possivelmente modificado por uma referência (a nosso ver, simples erro tipográfico) na segunda edição de "Reino Animal" de Cuvier editado em 1832." [details]
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