Museum of Los Angeles County Research and Collections/Crustacea 900 Exposition Blvd., Los Angeles, CA 90007
Ссылка для:
Gnathiidea
Источники:
Источник:
NODC Taxonomic Code
Приобретенный:
1996-07-29
Примечания:
Ссылка для:
Gnathiidea
Источник:
American Fisheries Society Special Publication 31
Приобретенный:
2004-05-18
Примечания:
McLaughlin et al. 2005. Common and Scientific Names of Aquatic Invertebrates from the United States and Canada: Crustaceans. American Fisheries Society Special Publication 31
Ссылка для:
Gnathiidea
Источник:
World List of Marine, Freshwater & Terrestrial Isopoda... 2005
Приобретенный:
2005-05-04
Примечания:
Compiled by Brian Kensley, Marilyn Schotte, and Steve Schilling (Oniscidea only), Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution. Found at http://www.nmnh.si.edu/iz/isopod/
Ссылка для:
Gnathiidea
Публикации:
Авторы/Редакторы:
Martin, Joel W., and George E. Davis
Дата публикации (перечислена/фактическая):
2001-12-14 / 2001-12-14
Название статьи/главы:
An Updated Classification of the Recent Crustacea
Название журнала/книги, номер тома:
Natural History Museum of Los Angeles, Science Series 39
Страницы:
124
Издатель:
Место публикации:
ISBN/ISSN:
/1-891276-27-1
Примечания:
Ссылка для:
Gnathiidea
Gnathiidea: Географическая информация
Географический отдел:
Юрисдикция/происхождение:
Gnathiidea: Комментарии
Комментарий:
Martin & Davis (2001) comment as follows: "Concerning the former suborder Gnathiidea, Brusca and Wilson (1991) suggested that the gnathiids were derived from among the families traditionally thought of as "fabelliferan" isopods (a group that they demonstrate is not monophyletic)... We have, for the current classification, removed the gnathiids from their own superfamily and have placed them within the Flabellifera, knowing that the Flabellifera itself is not monophyletic and must some day be extensively revised. L. Holthuis (pers. comm.) has suggested that we credit the family name Gnathiidae to Leach (1814) rather than to Harger (1880), as was used by Bowman and Abele (1982) and Roman and Dalens (1999)"