About: Adamson <i>et al.</i> (1985)   Goto Sponge  NotDistinct  Permalink

An Entity of Type : schema:CreativeWork, within Data Space : taxref.i3s.unice.fr associated with source document(s)

AttributesValues
rdf:type
label
  • Adamson <i>et al.</i> (1985)
isDefinedBy
schema:datePublished
dct:title
  • Adamson <i>et al.</i> (1985)
schema:identifier
dct:abstract
  • C. kermarreci sp. nov. (Rhigonematidae; Nematoda) is described from A. politus (Porat) (Rhinocricidae; Diplopoda) from Guadeloupe. The new species most closely resembles C. martiniquensis Adamson, 1984 from A. politus in Martinique and C. venezuelensis Adamson, 1984 from Rhinocricus flavocinctus from Venezuela in that the lips in the male are broad and the arrangement of caudal papillae is almost identical in the 3 spp. Males of C. kermarreci are easily distinguished by the absence of spines, by the form of the cuticular projections at the base of the buccal cavity and by the fact that the most anterior pair of caudal papillae are located very close together. Females are distinguished by the presence of 3 pairs of somatic papillae near the level of the vulva. The nematode fauna of A. politus includes species from 2 distinct orders and presumably reflects the fact that diplopods are among the most ancient hosts of nematodes.
bibo:abstract
  • C. kermarreci sp. nov. (Rhigonematidae; Nematoda) is described from A. politus (Porat) (Rhinocricidae; Diplopoda) from Guadeloupe. The new species most closely resembles C. martiniquensis Adamson, 1984 from A. politus in Martinique and C. venezuelensis Adamson, 1984 from Rhinocricus flavocinctus from Venezuela in that the lips in the male are broad and the arrangement of caudal papillae is almost identical in the 3 spp. Males of C. kermarreci are easily distinguished by the absence of spines, by the form of the cuticular projections at the base of the buccal cavity and by the fact that the most anterior pair of caudal papillae are located very close together. Females are distinguished by the presence of 3 pairs of somatic papillae near the level of the vulva. The nematode fauna of A. politus includes species from 2 distinct orders and presumably reflects the fact that diplopods are among the most ancient hosts of nematodes.
dct:issued
dct:bibliographicCitation
  • Adamson, M. &amp; van Waerebeke, D. 1985. <em>Carnoya kermarreci </em>n. sp. (Rhigonematidae: Nematoda) from <em>Anadenobolus politus</em> (Porat) (Rhinocricidae: Diplopoda) from Guadeloupe. <em>Systematic Parasitology</em>, 7(1): 27-32.
bibo:doi
  • 10.1007/BF00010158
is stated in (Wikidata) of
Faceted Search & Find service v1.13.91 as of Jun 18 2018


Alternative Linked Data Documents: ODE     Content Formats:       RDF       ODATA       Microdata      About   
This material is Open Knowledge   W3C Semantic Web Technology [RDF Data]
OpenLink Virtuoso version 07.20.3217 as of Jun 15 2018, on Linux (x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu), Single-Server Edition (31 GB total memory)
Data on this page belongs to its respective rights holders.
Virtuoso Faceted Browser Copyright © 2009-2024 OpenLink Software