Adiël A. Klompmaker, Roger W. Portell, Aaron T. Klier, Vanessa Prueter, Alyssa L. Tucker
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Summary[edit] Description: English: Dorsal view of male of Maguimithrax spinosissimus from Florida, USA. Scale bar width = 30 mm. Date: 1 October 2015. Source: Klompmaker AA, Portell RW, Klier AT, Prueter V, Tucker AL. (2015) Spider crabs of the Western Atlantic with special reference to fossil and some modern Mithracidae. PeerJ 3:e1301 https://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.1301. Author: Adiël A. Klompmaker, Roger W. Portell, Aaron T. Klier, Vanessa Prueter, Alyssa L. Tucker. : This file has been extracted from another file: Dorsal and ventral views of modern male specimens of Maguimithrax spinosissimus that differ in size.png : .
Summary[edit] Description: English: Northern Kelp Crab (Pugettia productus), Ganges Harbour, British Columbia. Date: 4 June 2008. Source: Own work. Author: D. Gordon E. Robertson.
PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; Parapleisticantha ludivinae Richer de Forges, Ng & Ahyong, 2013; Type status:PARATYPE; Identified by:Richer de Forges B., Ng P.K.L. & Ahyong S.T.; Individual Count:2
Summary[edit] Description: 日本語: 福井県の駅弁「越前かにめし」。 English: This is an ekiben in Fukui pref. Japan. Kanimeshi means "Crab Rice". Date: 20 October 2018. Source: Own work. Author: Miyuki Meinaka.
Paramithrax longipes, now Leptomithrax longipes Identifier: s7annalsmagazine10londuoft (find matches)Title: The annals and magazine of natural history : zoology, botany, and geologyYear: 1838 (1830s)Authors: Subjects: Natural historyPublisher: London : Taylor & FrancisContributing Library: Gerstein - University of TorontoDigitizing Sponsor: University of TorontoView Book Page: Book ViewerAbout This Book: Catalog EntryView All Images: All Images From Book Click here to view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.Text Appearing Before Image:to the orals on a thin unplatcdmembrane stretching like the web of a ducks foot between eacharm and the tegmen. The name Geplujrocrinus is suggested bythis resemblance to a suspension bridge. Minor points of distinc-tion from Hi/ocrinus are the fusion of the basals, the greater thicknessof the cup-plates, the almost complete atrophy of the ambulacrals,and the form of the pinnules, which have not the peculiar arrange-ment characteristic of Hyocrhms. These diflPerences have inducedthe authors to give a fresh diagnosis of the Hyocrinidae, differingconsiderably from that in the Challenger Report. Although the unique specimen of G. Grimcddn is small, some-what imperfect, and naturally cannot be sacrificed for minutedissection, it has been found possible to give a very exact descriptionof all the details of its external anatomy. These have suggested toone of the authors a renewed investigation of the type of Hi/ocrinusBetJiellianus, with results that may be published more fully else-where.Text Appearing After Image:Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.