Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-hc48f Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-22T16:00:57.840Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The distribution of Eurydice [Crustacea: Isopoda] in British waters, including E. affinis new to Britain

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 May 2009

D. A. Jones
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University College of Swansea
E. Naylor
Affiliation:
Department of Zoology, University College of Swansea

Extract

Of the seven British species of Eurydice two are intertidal, three range successively from the immediate sublittoral to the edge of the continental shelf, and two predominate at the edge of and beyond the shelf. Most species have been recorded from the benthos and from surface plankton. E. affinis is recorded for the first time in Britain, among E. pulchra in intertidal sand in the Bristol Channel.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 1967

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Bassindale, R., 1943. Intertidal fauna of southern shores of the Bristol Channel. J. Ecol., Vol. 31, pp. 129.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brady, F., 1942. The distribution of the fauna of some intertidal sands and muds on the Northumberland coast. J. Anim. Ecol., Vol. 12, pp. 127.Google Scholar
Colman, J. S. ' Segrove, F., 1955 a. The fauna living in Stoupe Beck Sands, Robin Hood's Bay (Yorkshire, North Riding). J. Anim. Ecol., Vol. 24, pp. 426–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Colman, J. S. ' Segrove, F., 1955 b. The tidal plankton over Stoupe Beck Sands, Robin Hood's Bay (Yorkshire, North Riding). J. Anim. Ecol., Vol. 22, pp. 445–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Crawford, G. I., 1937. Notes on burrowing Isopoda and Amphipoda in various soils of the sea bottom. J. mar. biol. Ass. U.K., Vol. 21, pp. 631–46.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fage, L., 1933. Pêches planctoniques à la lumière effectuées à Banyuls-sur-Mer et à Concarneau. III. Crustacea. Archs Zool. exp. gén., T. 76, pp. 228–32.Google Scholar
Hansen, H. J., 1905. Revision of the European marine forms of the Cirolaninae, a subfamily of Crustacea Isopoda. J. Linn. Soc., Vol. 29, pp. 337–73.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hansen, H. J., 1916. Crustacea Malacostraca. III. V. The order Isopoda. Dan. Ingolf-Exped., Vol. 3 (5), pp. 1262.Google Scholar
Holthuis, L. B., 1950. Isopodes et Tanaidacés marins de la Belgiques; remarques sur quelques espèces de la zone méridionale de la Mer du Nord. Bull. Inst. r. Sci. nat. Belg., Vol. 26 (53), pp. 119.Google Scholar
Jones, N. S., 1951. The bottom fauna off the south of the Isle of Man. J. Anim. Ecol., Vol. 20, pp. 132–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marine Biological Association, 1957. Plymouth Marine Fauna, 3rd ed. 457 pp. Plymouth.Google Scholar
Naylor, E., 1958. Isopoda. Fich. Ident. Zooplancton, No. 77, pp. 14.Google Scholar
Norman, A. M., 1906. A new Heterotanais and a new Eurydice, genera of Isopoda. Ann. Mag. nat. Hist., Ser. 7, Vol. 17, pp. 167–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norman, A. M. & Scott, T., 1906. Crustacea of Devon and Cornwall. 232 pp. London: W. Wesley and Son.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rees, C. B., 1939. Notes on the ecology of the sandy beaches of North Donegal. Proc. R. Ir. Acad., Vol. 45, pp. 215–29.Google Scholar
Salvat, B., 1962. Faune des sédiments meubles intertidaux du Bassin d'Arcachon. Systématique et Ecologie. Cah. Biol. mar., T. 3, pp. 219–44.Google Scholar
Salvat, B., 1966. Eurydice pulchra (Leach, 1915), Eurydice affinis (Hansen 1905), isopodes cirolanidae, taxonomie, éthologie, écologie, répartition verticale, et cycle reproducteur. Act. Soc. linn. Bordeaux., 103 serie A, 1. pp. 177.Google Scholar
Scott, A., 1960. The fauna of a sand beach, Village Bay, St Kilda, a dynamic relationship. Oikos, Vol. 2, pp. 153–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Soika, G. A., 1955. Ethologie, écologie, systematique et biogéographie des Eurydice s. str. Vie Milieu, T. 6 (1), pp. 3852.Google Scholar
Stephensen, K. 1915. Isopoda, Tanaidacea, Cumacea, Amphipoda. Rep. Dan. oceanogr. Exped. Mediterr., Vol. 2 (1), pp. 134.Google Scholar
Tattersall, W. M., 1906. The marine fauna of the coast of Ireland. Pt. V. Isopoda. Rep. Sea Inld. Fish. Ire., Sci. Invest., 1904, No. 2, 90 pp.Google Scholar
Tattersall, W. M., 1911. Dienordischen Isopoden. Nord. Plankt. Abt.,6, pp.181313.Google Scholar
Tattersall, W. M., 1913. Clare Island Survey, Isopoda. Proc. R. Ir. Acad., Vol. 31, pp. 142.Google Scholar
Torelli, B., 1932. Le specie mediterranee del gen. Eurydice. Boll. Soc. Nat. Napoli, Vol. 44, PP. 7579.Google Scholar
Walker, A. O., 1898. Malacostraca from the west coast of Ireland. Proc. Trans. Lpool biol. Soc., Vol. 12, pp. 159–72.Google Scholar
Watkin, E. E., 1942. The macrofauna of the intertidal sand of Kames Bay, Millport, Bureshire. Trans. R. Soc. Edinb., Vol. 60, pp. 543–61.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolff, W. J., 1966. Notes on Eurydice (Isopoda, Flabellifera) from the Netherlands. Zoöl. Meded., Vol. 41 (14), pp. 221–7.Google Scholar