Copepoda name details
Dias mossi Norman, 1878
364842 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:364842)
unaccepted > nomen nudum (synonym)
Species
Dias Lilljeborg, 1853 accepted as Acartia Dana, 1846
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
Norman, A.M. (1878). Notes on the Oceanic Copepoda. <em>In: Nares, G.S. (ed.). Narrative of a Voyage to the Polar Sea During 1875-1876 in H.M.S. Alert and Discovery, with Notes on Natural History, Museum Normanianum. London.</em> 2:249-253.
page(s): 253; note: The next species is remarkable on account of the numerous long setae of the anterior antennae, which are not longer than the cephalo-thorax, and also the very long setae of the swimming feet ; it is p...
[details] 
page(s): 253; note: The next species is remarkable on account of the numerous long setae of the anterior antennae, which are not longer than the cephalo-thorax, and also the very long setae of the swimming feet ; it is p...
The next species is remarkable on account of the numerous long setae of the anterior antennae, which are not longer than the cephalo-thorax, and also the very long setae of the swimming feet ; it is possibly a Dias, and may be called Dias(?) mossi.
Walter, T.C.; Boxshall, G. (2024). World of Copepods Database. Dias mossi Norman, 1878. Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/copepoda/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=364842 on 2025-03-29
original description
Norman, A.M. (1878). Notes on the Oceanic Copepoda. <em>In: Nares, G.S. (ed.). Narrative of a Voyage to the Polar Sea During 1875-1876 in H.M.S. Alert and Discovery, with Notes on Natural History, Museum Normanianum. London.</em> 2:249-253.
page(s): 253; note: The next species is remarkable on account of the numerous long setae of the anterior antennae, which are not longer than the cephalo-thorax, and also the very long setae of the swimming feet ; it is p...
[details] 
page(s): 253; note: The next species is remarkable on account of the numerous long setae of the anterior antennae, which are not longer than the cephalo-thorax, and also the very long setae of the swimming feet ; it is p...
The next species is remarkable on account of the numerous long setae of the anterior antennae, which are not longer than the cephalo-thorax, and also the very long setae of the swimming feet ; it is possibly a Dias, and may be called Dias(?) mossi.