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Skookumchuck Narrows, Jervis Inlet, British Columbia. Juvenile 25 mm across carapace.
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Photos appeared in original description in Zootaxa. Taken by Steven Haddock,
haddock@mbari.org.
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Texel (NL), 21.08.2007 (D. Swieringa) Characteristics used for id: - body thin and long - abdomen reduced - upper antennae longer than lower - lower antennae with hairs References: HAYWARD & RYLAND, 1998; CAMPELL, (w.d.) Checked by A. Gittenberger (Naturalis, Leiden, NL)
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King George Isl./Maxwell Bay. Shallow water
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Parathelges weberi Nierstrasz and Brender à Brandis, 1923 from Philippines, Oriental Mindoro, Puerto Galera (13°30’N, 120°57’E), 31 July 1997, infesting female Calcinus minutus coll. J. Williams
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Synalpheus agelas Pequegnat & Heard, 1979: ovigerous female from St. Martin (FLMNH UF 32276) in dorsal (a) and lateral (b) views. Source: Anker et al., 2012
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Skookumchuck Narrows, Jervis Inlet, British Columbia. Juvenile 80 mm across carapace.
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Photos appeared in original description in Zootaxa. Taken by Steven Haddock,
haddock@mbari.org.
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Taken on board of Polarstern during ANDEEP
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King George Isl./Maxwell Bay. Shallow water
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The "giant red mysid," Gnathophausia ingens (also known as Neognathophausia ingens), grows to be three or four inches long. This shrimp-like crustacean was photographed by ROV Tiburon at around 900 meters (3,000 feet) below the sea surface, over the outer part of Monterey Canyon, where the water contains very little dissolved oxygen. Its bright red color looks black in the dim blue light of the deep-sea. It eats particles of debris and small dead organisms sinking down toward the seafloor. If attacked or startled, it emits a glowing liquid that may startle or distract hungry predators Source: https://www.instagram.com/p/BBtL8s4gF9M/
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Explanation of the plates. Abbreviations common to all figures. a1 = antennulae (first pair of antennæ). a2 = antennae (second » » » ). M = mandibles. m1 = maxillulæ (first pair of maxillæ). m2 = maxillæ (second » » ). mxp = maxillipeds. p1-p7 = first—seventh pairs of pereiopods. pl1—pl5 = first—fifth pairs of pleopods. u = uropods. Fig.11.Edotia magellanica CUNNINGHAM, pleon from above. Fig.11 A. » » , pleon en profile. Fig.12. » Lilljeborgi n. sp. Fig.13. » oculata n. sp. Fig.13 p1x. » » , hand of first pair of pereiopod
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a, b, male from Cozumel, Mexico (RMNH D54848), in dorsal (a) and lateral (b) views; c, female from the same locality (MNHN-IU-2010-4117); d, ovigerous female from Panama (not deposited); e, f, ovigerous female from Isla Grande, Panama [identification tentative] (OUMNH.ZC.2012-07-050), in dorsal (e) and lateral (f) views; g, ovigerous female from Bocas del Toro, Panama (OUMNH.ZC.2012-07-120); h, ovigerous female from the same locality, with four articles in the carpus of the second pereiopod (OUMNH.ZC.2012-07-047). Photographs: a, b, c, e, f, g, h, by A. Anker; d, by E. Tóth.
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Epimeria abyssalis sp. n., paratype female (KMNH IvR 500906) photographed on board shortly after sampling. Scale bar: 10 mm Source: http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.638.10329
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A very old Glyptonotus with filled marsupium.
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posterior
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Bathynomus giganteus, 720 m Gulf of Mexico Image courtesy of the NOAA Office of Ocean Exploration and Research, Gulf of Mexico 2017. Identification from photograph by M. Wicksten and D. Amon.
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On the beam near Katangli, Northeastern Sakhalin, Okhotsk Sea. Alive specimens. Catched on meat (pork) using handmade tubes with sieve by Evgeniy Krivoruchka from R/V "Igor Maksimov" on 21.09.2015.
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