WoRMS source details

Marion, A.F. (1874). Sur les Annélides du Golfe de Marseille. Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Paris. 79: 398-401.
62309
Marion, A.F.
1874
Sur les Annélides du Golfe de Marseille.
Comptes Rendus de l'Académie des Sciences, Paris
79: 398-401
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb)
Mediterranean
Systematics, Taxonomy
RIS (EndNote, Reference Manager, ProCite, RefWorks)
BibTex (BibDesk, LaTeX)
Date
action
by
2013-01-12 18:30:12Z
created
db_admin
2014-01-19 01:43:20Z
changed
2018-10-09 21:20:26Z
changed
2018-11-27 22:15:52Z
changed

Gyptis Marion, 1874 (original description)
Lacydonia Marion, 1874 (original description)
Lacydonia miranda Marion, 1874 (original description)
Magalia Marion, 1874 accepted as Syllidia Quatrefages, 1865 (original description)
Magalia perarmata Marion, 1874 accepted as Syllidia armata Quatrefages, 1866 (original description)
 Authority

The author of Gyptis is Marion alone. It is quite clear that Marion alone wrote the 1874 'news item' article in ... [details]

 Authority

Marion (1874) validly published the name in a preliminary report, although the full description is in Marion & ... [details]

 Authority

Marion (1874) validly published the name in a preliminary report, although the full description is in Marion & ... [details]

 Authority

The author of Magalia is Marion alone. It is quite clear that Marion alone wrote the 1874 'news item' article in ... [details]

 Authority

The author of Magalia perarmata is Marion alone. It is quite clear that Marion alone wrote the 1874 'news item' ... [details]

 Etymology

Not stated. However, it is clear that Gyptis is a female personal name most likely adopted from a foundation myth ... [details]

 Etymology

Not stated. Cydōnĭa is an ancient town on the north coast of Crete, now Canea. La Canea has been used as a ... [details]

 Etymology

Not stated. Mirandus is Latin for wonderful or strange. As Marion used 'miranda', a feminine ending, the genus ... [details]

 Grammatical gender

Feminine. Although the etymology origin of Lacydonia suggesting a feminine genus is unconfirmed, the usage by ... [details]