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Acartia lefevreae

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Acartia lefevreae is a species of copepod belonging to the family Acartiidae. This species was discovered when specimens previously identified as Acartia clausi were examined and found to belong to a separate species.[2] Its range overlaps with that of A. clausi, being found in the western Mediterranean and the north east Atlantic as far north as the English Channel, but it tends to be found in more brackish habitats such as estuaries.

This species is generally similar to A. clausi but is usually noticeably smaller (total length 0.8–0.9 mm) and differs in the arrangement and size of the spines on the back of the posterior body segment (metasome).

References

  1. ^ T. Chad Walter (2011). Walter TC, Boxshall G (eds.). "Acartia lefevreae Bradford, 1976". World of Copepods database. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved March 5, 2012.
  2. ^ Bradford, Janet (1976). "Partial Revision of the Acartia Subgenus Acartiura (Copepoda: Calanoida: Acartiidae)". New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research. 10 (1): 159–202. doi:10.1080/00288330.1976.9515606.
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Acartia lefevreae: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Acartia lefevreae is a species of copepod belonging to the family Acartiidae. This species was discovered when specimens previously identified as Acartia clausi were examined and found to belong to a separate species. Its range overlaps with that of A. clausi, being found in the western Mediterranean and the north east Atlantic as far north as the English Channel, but it tends to be found in more brackish habitats such as estuaries.

This species is generally similar to A. clausi but is usually noticeably smaller (total length 0.8–0.9 mm) and differs in the arrangement and size of the spines on the back of the posterior body segment (metasome).

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Validity

provided by World Register of Marine Species
According to Vives & Shmeleva (2007) this species is valid, the difference with A. margalefi leans upon the form of the genital segment of the female and the first segment of the male P5. This position was not followed by Bradford-Grieve (1999, p.4) who did not have knowledge of the publication of Alcaraz from the same year. A serious doubt subsists on the validity

Reference

Razouls, C., N. Desreumaux, J. Kouwenberg & F. de Bovée. (2005). Biodiversity of Marine Planktonic Copepods (morphology, geographical distribution and biological data). Sorbonne University, CNRS.

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Kouwenberg, Juliana [email]