WoRMS taxon details

Articulata

183494  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:183494)

Zittel, 1879
accepted
Subclass

Ordering

  • Alphabetically
  • By status

Children Display

  1. Order Articulata incertae sedis
  2. Order Comatulida
  3. Order Cyrtocrinida
  4. Order Hyocrinida
  5. Order Isocrinida
  6. Order Bourgueticrinida accepted as Bourgueticrinina (synonym)
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
Miller JS (1821) A natural history of the Crinoidea or lily-shaped animals, with observations on the genera <i>Asteria</i>, <i>Euryale</i>, <i>Comatula</i>, and <i>Marsupites</i>. C. Frost. Bristol. 150 p., 50 pl., available online at https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.32130 [details] 
Description Cup composed of radial and basal ossicles without anal plates in the adult. Infrabasals present in many fossil taxa; reduced...  
Description Cup composed of radial and basal ossicles without anal plates in the adult. Infrabasals present in many fossil taxa; reduced or absent in extant taxa. Mouth exposed on the surface. Axial nerves enclosed in a canal penetrating the basals, radials, and brachials. Brachials generally joined by muscular articulation, but non-muscular (ligamentary) articulations are present in almost all species. Arms bearing pinnules in all extant taxa.  [details]
Messing, C.; Gondim, A.I.; Markello, K.; Poatskievick Pierezan, B.; Taylor, K.; Eléaume, M. (2024). World List of Crinoidea. Articulata. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: https://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=183494 on 2024-11-10
Date
action
by
2005-11-08 08:59:54Z
created
2007-10-10 10:36:00Z
checked

Creative Commons License The webpage text is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License


original description Miller JS (1821) A natural history of the Crinoidea or lily-shaped animals, with observations on the genera <i>Asteria</i>, <i>Euryale</i>, <i>Comatula</i>, and <i>Marsupites</i>. C. Frost. Bristol. 150 p., 50 pl., available online at https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.32130 [details] 

context source (PeRMS) Solís-Marín, F. A.; Alvarado, J. J.; Abreu-Pérez, M.; Aguilera, O.; Alió, J.; Bacallado-Aránega, J. J.; Barraza, E.; Benavides-Serrato, M.; Benítez-Villalobos, F.; Betancourt-Fernández, L.; Borges, M.; Brandt, M.; Brogger, M. I.; Borrero-Pérez, G. H.; Buitrón-Sánchez, E.; Campos, L. S.; Cantera, J.; Clemente, S.; Cohen-Renjifo, M.; Coppard, S.; Costa-Lotufo, L. V.; del Valle-García, R.; Díaz, Y.; Díaz de Vivar, M. E.; Díaz-Martínez, J. P.; Durán-González, A.; Epherra, L.; Escolar, M.; Francisco, V.; Freire, C. A.; García-Arrarás, E.; Gil, D. G.; Guarderas, P.; Hadel, V. F.; Hearn, A.; Hernández, J. C.; Hernández-Delgado, E. A.; Herrera-Moreno, A.; Herrero-Pérezrul, M. D.; Hooker, Y.; Honey-Escandón, M. B. I.; Lodeiros, C.; Luzuriaga, M.; Manso, C. L. C.; Martín, A.; Martinez, M. I.; Martínez, S.; Moro-Abad; Mutschke, E.; Navarro, J. C.; Neira, R.; Noriega, N.; Palleiro-Nayar, J. S.; Pérez, A. F.; Pérez-Ruzafa, A.; Prieto-Rios, E.; Reyes, J.; Rodríguez, R.; Rubilar, T.; Sancho-Mejía, T.; Sangil, C.; Silva, J. R. M. C.; Sonnenholzner, J. I.; Ventura, C. R.; Tablado, A.; Tavares, Y.; Tiago, C. G.; Tuya, F.;Williams, S. M. (2013). Appendix. <em>In: J. J. Alvarado & F. A. Solís-Marín (eds), Echinoderm Research and Diversity in Latin America.</em> pp. 471-510. Springer; Berlin & Heidelberg. page(s): 543-654. [details] 

basis of record Hess H (2011) Articulata: Introduction. In: Seldon P (ed.) and Ausich WI (Coordinating Author). Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part T, Echinodermata 2 Revised, Crinoidea 3. University of Kansas Press, Lawrence, Kansas. pp. 1-22. [details] 
 
 Present  Inaccurate  Introduced: alien  Containing type locality 
From editor or global species database
Description Cup composed of radial and basal ossicles without anal plates in the adult. Infrabasals present in many fossil taxa; reduced or absent in extant taxa. Mouth exposed on the surface. Axial nerves enclosed in a canal penetrating the basals, radials, and brachials. Brachials generally joined by muscular articulation, but non-muscular (ligamentary) articulations are present in almost all species. Arms bearing pinnules in all extant taxa.  [details]
    Definitions

Loading...


LanguageName 
Japanese 有関節  [details]