Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp.

Holopedium atlanticum n. sp. Synonymy. Individuals from North America previously identified as H. amazonicum should properly be identified as H. atlanticum . Birge (1918): 693, Fig. 1061 b Pennak (1953): 364–365, Fig. 227 d Brooks (1959): 603, Fig. 27.13 Pennak (1978): 365–366, Fig. 254 d Pennak (19...

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Main Authors: Rowe, Chad L., Adamowicz, Sarah J., Hebert, Paul D. N.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5614584
https://zenodo.org/record/5614584
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5614584
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Branchiopoda
Diplostraca
Holopediidae
Holopedium
Holopedium atlanticum
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Branchiopoda
Diplostraca
Holopediidae
Holopedium
Holopedium atlanticum
Rowe, Chad L.
Adamowicz, Sarah J.
Hebert, Paul D. N.
Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp.
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Branchiopoda
Diplostraca
Holopediidae
Holopedium
Holopedium atlanticum
description Holopedium atlanticum n. sp. Synonymy. Individuals from North America previously identified as H. amazonicum should properly be identified as H. atlanticum . Birge (1918): 693, Fig. 1061 b Pennak (1953): 364–365, Fig. 227 d Brooks (1959): 603, Fig. 27.13 Pennak (1978): 365–366, Fig. 254 d Pennak (1989): 386–387, Fig. 12 d Korovchinsky (1992): 77–78, Figs. 371–373, 375, 377 Etymology. atlanticum refers to the distribution of this species in lakes along the eastern Atlantic seaboard of North America. Type locality. Moosehead Lake, Maine (45.633 º N, 69.683 º W). On Hwy ME- 6, in close proximity to the town of Moosehead. Type specimens. Holotype : an ovigerous female in ethanol deposited in the CMN under accession number CMNC 2007 -0741 (collection date September 2, 1993). Paratypes : 10 ovigerous females, preserved in ethanol, deposited in the CMN under accession number CMNC 2007 -0742 (collection date September 2, 1993). Material examined. Other habitats with H. atlanticum are listed in Appendix A. Morphological description. FEMALE. Representative photomicrographs are shown in Fig. 10. The jelly coat is of the A type, in which the anterior jelly curl arches toward the anterior portion of the jelly coat, and the lateral lobes are undivided (see Montvilo et al. 1987). Adult carapace lengths range from 0.44–1.01 mm (mean 0.73 mm), while carapace heights range from 0.30–1.06 mm (mean 0.74 mm). The H/L ratios range from 0.68–1.37 (mean 1.00). The ventral carapace margin is ordinarily spinulated posteriorly, but smooth anteriorly. Individuals lacking spinulation along the entire ventral valve margin were encountered. Anal spine number ranges from 6–11 (mean 8.35). Holopedium atlanticum lacks a basal spine on each postabdominal claw. Each claw ordinarily has a row of denticles running laterally from the base of the claw to its midpoint, although individuals were observed that lacked claw denticulation. MALE. Males have been found in small numbers in collections from sites in North Carolina in May and June; however, they are typically found in the highest abundance in the autumn (Hegyi 1973). Males of this species were not examined in this study, and thus detailed morphometrics cannot be presented. However, Hegyi (1973) presented a photograph and brief description of a male Holopedium which, based on distributional data, is probably H. atlanticum . Differential diagnosis. Although H. atlanticum is morphologically indistinguishable from H. amazonicum , these two species have allopatric distributions reducing the likelihood of genetic exchange (Fig. 4 c,e). Holopedium atlanticum is distinguished from H. acidophilum by the larger size and greater number of anal spines of the latter species. It differs from members of the H. gibberum complex by the absence of a basal spine on either postabdominal claw. Holopedium atlanticum can be biochemically distinguished from H. acidophilum at the Pgm locus, as H. atlanticum produces an enzyme which migrates slower than that of the latter species. COI mtDNA sequence divergence between H. atlanticum and H. amazonicum averages 12.3 %, while the divergence between H. atlanticum and H. acidophilum averages 10.6 %. Based on current evidence, individuals showing less than 4.8 % divergence from a representative COI mtDNA sequence (GenBank AF 245353) belong to H. atlanticum . Distribution. H. atlanticum was found along the Atlantic coast of North America from New Brunswick and Maine south to Florida, (Fig. 4 c). Populations of Holopedium reported by other workers from the southeastern United States are likely also H. atlanticum . Its range overlaps that of H. glacialis in the northeastern USA and southern New Brunswick, where these species occur sympatrically without hybridization. The extent of range overlap with H. glacialis is unresolved by this study, but several workers have identified H. atlanticum (formerly H. amazonicum ) as far north as New Brunswick and H. glacialis (formerly H. gibberum ) as far south as Tennessee and possibly South Carolina (Coker 1938, Bunting 1970, Hebert & Finston 1997). Breeding system. Males were not detected in populations collected throughout the summer in this study. In a life history study spanning two years, males were most abundant in early spring and late autumn (Hegyi 1973). In some southern localities, populations persist throughout the winter. Due to the existence of males, this species likely reproduces by cyclic parthenogenesis, but there is very little allozyme variation, suggesting that either this species engages in sexual reproduction infrequently or that variation has been trimmed due to a population bottleneck. A note regarding H. groenlandicum and H. ramasarmii While individuals from Greenland were not included in the present study, the recently described species H. groenlandicum (Korovchinsky 2005) can purportedly be distinguished from H. gibberum by its “dorsally low shell and jelly envelope, shorter row of valve marginal spinules which are subdivided in groups, and comparatively longer postabdominal claws.” However, shell shape is a highly variable feature, which may be environmentally influenced (Røen 1962) and can depend upon the locality and presence/absence of fish (CLR pers. obs). The body lengths (0.74 to 1.09mm, mean 1.45mm), carapace heights (0.80 to 1.57mm, mean 1.19mm), and H:L ratios (0.641 to 1.000, mean 0.814) found by Korovchinsky (2005) in the Greenland populations fall within the ranges of values found in H. gibberum and H. glacialis populations in the present study (the preceding ranges and means that were not published in Korovchinsky [2005] were provided to CLR by that author). Jelly coat shape may be influenced by preservation (CLR, pers. obs), and therefore this trait may not be a good feature for diagnosing species. Moreover, the degree of carapace margin spinulation is also a highly variable trait within species (present study), although the discontinuous nature of the spinulation in the Greenland populations is noteworthy. Finally, the length of the postabdominal claws reported by Korovchinsky (2005, his Figure 1) is within the range of claw lengths observed for the H. gibberum s.s. populations studied here. Furthermore, the fact that we detected closely related lineages of H. gibberum s.s. in both northern Europe and North America suggests that similar lineages may be found in intervening arctic areas. Individuals from India were also not included in the present study. Consideration of the differences between either of the species in the H. gibberum complex and H. ramasarmii (Rao et al. 1998) is not currently possible due to the poor description of the latter species, lacking in detail. Korovchinsky (2004) labeled this species incertae sedis . We suggest that genetic evidence is required to determine if H. groenlandicum and H. ramasarmii are distinct species or if they are synonymous with described taxa. : Published as part of Rowe, Chad L., Adamowicz, Sarah J. & Hebert, Paul D. N., 2007, Three new cryptic species of the freshwater zooplankton genus Holopedium (Crustacea: Branchiopoda: Ctenopoda), revealed by genetic methods, pp. 1-49 in Zootaxa 1656 on pages 34-36, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.179852 : {"references": ["Birge, E. A. (1918) The water fleas (Cladocera). In: Ward, H. B. & Whipple, G. C. (Eds.), Fresh-water Biology, 1 st ed. John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 676 - 750.", "Pennak, R. W. (1953) Cladocera (Water Fleas). In: Pennak, R. W. (Ed.), Fresh-Water Invertebrates of the United States, 1 st ed., Ronald Press Company, New York. Chapter 16.", "Brooks, J. L. (1959) Cladocera. In: Edmondson, W. T. (Ed.), Fresh-water Biology, 2 nd ed. John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 587 - 656.", "Pennak, R. W. (1978) Cladocera (Water Fleas). In: Pennak, R. W. (Ed.), Fresh-Water Invertebrates of the United States, 2 nd ed., John Wiley & Sons, New York. Chapter 16.", "Pennak, R. W. (1989) Cladocera (Water Fleas). In: Pennak, R. W. (Ed.), Fresh-Water Invertebrates of the United States. Protozoa to Mollusca, 3 rd ed., John Wiley & Sons, New York. Chapter 16.", "Korovchinsky, N. M. (1992) Sididae and Holopediidae (Crustacea: Daphniiformes). Guides to the Identification of the Microinvertebrates of the Continental Waters of the World. 3. SPB Academic Publishing, The Hague.", "Montvilo, J. A., Hegyi, M. A. & Kevin, M. J. (1987) Aspects of the anatomy of the jelly coat of Holopedium and certain other Cladocerans (Crustacea). Transactions of the American Miscroscopical Society, 106, 105 - 113.", "Hegyi, M. A. (1973) Aspects of the ecology, distribution, and systematics of the genus Holopedium (Cladocera, Crustacea). Ph. D. Dissertation. University of Tennessee.", "Coker, R. E. (1938) Anomalies of crustacean distribution in the Carolinas with a list of Cyclopoids of the general region of Chapel Hill, N. C. Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society, 54, 76 - 87.", "Bunting, D. L. (1970) The Cladocera and Copepoda of Tennessee I. Limnetic Cladocera of east Tennessee and the TVA reservoirs. Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science, 45, 2 - 5.", "Hebert, P. D. N. & Finston, T. L. (1997) Taxon diversity in the genus Holopedium (Crustacea: Cladocera) from the lakes of eastern North America. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 54, 1928 - 1936.", "Korovchinsky, N. M. (2005) New species of Holopedium Zaddach, 1855 (Crustacea: Cladocera: Ctenopoda) from Greenland. Journal of Limnology, 64, 103 - 112.", "Roen, U. (1962) Studies on freshwater Entomostraca in Greenland. II. Localities, ecology, and geographical distribution of species. Meddelelser om Gronland, 170, 1 - 249.", "Rao, L. M., Naidu, N. J. & Padmaja, G. (1998) Holopedium ramasarmii n. sp. (Cladocera: Holopedidae), a new cladoceran from freshwaters of Visakhapatnam. Uttar Pradesh Journal of Zoology, 18, 45 - 47.", "Korovchinsky, N. M. (2004) Vetvistousie rakoobraznije otriada Ctenopoda mirovoj fauni (morfologija, sistematika, ekologija, zoogeografija). KMK Press, Moscow. [Cladocerans of the order Ctenopoda of the world fauna (morphology, systematics, ecology, biogeography). In Russian.]."]}
format Text
author Rowe, Chad L.
Adamowicz, Sarah J.
Hebert, Paul D. N.
author_facet Rowe, Chad L.
Adamowicz, Sarah J.
Hebert, Paul D. N.
author_sort Rowe, Chad L.
title Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp.
title_short Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp.
title_full Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp.
title_fullStr Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp.
title_full_unstemmed Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp.
title_sort holopedium atlanticum rowe, adamowicz & hebert, 2007, n. sp.
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2007
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5614584
https://zenodo.org/record/5614584
long_lat ENVELOPE(-63.071,-63.071,-70.797,-70.797)
ENVELOPE(-60.904,-60.904,-62.592,-62.592)
ENVELOPE(-57.976,-57.976,-63.685,-63.685)
ENVELOPE(70.203,70.203,-49.626,-49.626)
ENVELOPE(8.551,8.551,62.905,62.905)
geographic Arctic
Greenland
Curl
Rowe
Chapel Hill
Gronland
Røen
geographic_facet Arctic
Greenland
Curl
Rowe
Chapel Hill
Gronland
Røen
genre Arctic
Greenland
Zooplankton
genre_facet Arctic
Greenland
Zooplankton
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5614584
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179852
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5614584 2023-05-15T15:21:06+02:00 Holopedium atlanticum Rowe, Adamowicz & Hebert, 2007, n. sp. Rowe, Chad L. Adamowicz, Sarah J. Hebert, Paul D. N. 2007 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5614584 https://zenodo.org/record/5614584 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC14F249D23FF9FFFA4A10EFFC4C76B http://zoobank.org/CAAFEE2B-D125-4E08-BC73-EE1256579810 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179852 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC14F249D23FF9FFFA4A10EFFC4C76B https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179862 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179856 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179853 http://zoobank.org/CAAFEE2B-D125-4E08-BC73-EE1256579810 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5614583 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Branchiopoda Diplostraca Holopediidae Holopedium Holopedium atlanticum Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2007 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5614584 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179852 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179862 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179856 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.179853 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5614583 2022-02-08T12:40:44Z Holopedium atlanticum n. sp. Synonymy. Individuals from North America previously identified as H. amazonicum should properly be identified as H. atlanticum . Birge (1918): 693, Fig. 1061 b Pennak (1953): 364–365, Fig. 227 d Brooks (1959): 603, Fig. 27.13 Pennak (1978): 365–366, Fig. 254 d Pennak (1989): 386–387, Fig. 12 d Korovchinsky (1992): 77–78, Figs. 371–373, 375, 377 Etymology. atlanticum refers to the distribution of this species in lakes along the eastern Atlantic seaboard of North America. Type locality. Moosehead Lake, Maine (45.633 º N, 69.683 º W). On Hwy ME- 6, in close proximity to the town of Moosehead. Type specimens. Holotype : an ovigerous female in ethanol deposited in the CMN under accession number CMNC 2007 -0741 (collection date September 2, 1993). Paratypes : 10 ovigerous females, preserved in ethanol, deposited in the CMN under accession number CMNC 2007 -0742 (collection date September 2, 1993). Material examined. Other habitats with H. atlanticum are listed in Appendix A. Morphological description. FEMALE. Representative photomicrographs are shown in Fig. 10. The jelly coat is of the A type, in which the anterior jelly curl arches toward the anterior portion of the jelly coat, and the lateral lobes are undivided (see Montvilo et al. 1987). Adult carapace lengths range from 0.44–1.01 mm (mean 0.73 mm), while carapace heights range from 0.30–1.06 mm (mean 0.74 mm). The H/L ratios range from 0.68–1.37 (mean 1.00). The ventral carapace margin is ordinarily spinulated posteriorly, but smooth anteriorly. Individuals lacking spinulation along the entire ventral valve margin were encountered. Anal spine number ranges from 6–11 (mean 8.35). Holopedium atlanticum lacks a basal spine on each postabdominal claw. Each claw ordinarily has a row of denticles running laterally from the base of the claw to its midpoint, although individuals were observed that lacked claw denticulation. MALE. Males have been found in small numbers in collections from sites in North Carolina in May and June; however, they are typically found in the highest abundance in the autumn (Hegyi 1973). Males of this species were not examined in this study, and thus detailed morphometrics cannot be presented. However, Hegyi (1973) presented a photograph and brief description of a male Holopedium which, based on distributional data, is probably H. atlanticum . Differential diagnosis. Although H. atlanticum is morphologically indistinguishable from H. amazonicum , these two species have allopatric distributions reducing the likelihood of genetic exchange (Fig. 4 c,e). Holopedium atlanticum is distinguished from H. acidophilum by the larger size and greater number of anal spines of the latter species. It differs from members of the H. gibberum complex by the absence of a basal spine on either postabdominal claw. Holopedium atlanticum can be biochemically distinguished from H. acidophilum at the Pgm locus, as H. atlanticum produces an enzyme which migrates slower than that of the latter species. COI mtDNA sequence divergence between H. atlanticum and H. amazonicum averages 12.3 %, while the divergence between H. atlanticum and H. acidophilum averages 10.6 %. Based on current evidence, individuals showing less than 4.8 % divergence from a representative COI mtDNA sequence (GenBank AF 245353) belong to H. atlanticum . Distribution. H. atlanticum was found along the Atlantic coast of North America from New Brunswick and Maine south to Florida, (Fig. 4 c). Populations of Holopedium reported by other workers from the southeastern United States are likely also H. atlanticum . Its range overlaps that of H. glacialis in the northeastern USA and southern New Brunswick, where these species occur sympatrically without hybridization. The extent of range overlap with H. glacialis is unresolved by this study, but several workers have identified H. atlanticum (formerly H. amazonicum ) as far north as New Brunswick and H. glacialis (formerly H. gibberum ) as far south as Tennessee and possibly South Carolina (Coker 1938, Bunting 1970, Hebert & Finston 1997). Breeding system. Males were not detected in populations collected throughout the summer in this study. In a life history study spanning two years, males were most abundant in early spring and late autumn (Hegyi 1973). In some southern localities, populations persist throughout the winter. Due to the existence of males, this species likely reproduces by cyclic parthenogenesis, but there is very little allozyme variation, suggesting that either this species engages in sexual reproduction infrequently or that variation has been trimmed due to a population bottleneck. A note regarding H. groenlandicum and H. ramasarmii While individuals from Greenland were not included in the present study, the recently described species H. groenlandicum (Korovchinsky 2005) can purportedly be distinguished from H. gibberum by its “dorsally low shell and jelly envelope, shorter row of valve marginal spinules which are subdivided in groups, and comparatively longer postabdominal claws.” However, shell shape is a highly variable feature, which may be environmentally influenced (Røen 1962) and can depend upon the locality and presence/absence of fish (CLR pers. obs). The body lengths (0.74 to 1.09mm, mean 1.45mm), carapace heights (0.80 to 1.57mm, mean 1.19mm), and H:L ratios (0.641 to 1.000, mean 0.814) found by Korovchinsky (2005) in the Greenland populations fall within the ranges of values found in H. gibberum and H. glacialis populations in the present study (the preceding ranges and means that were not published in Korovchinsky [2005] were provided to CLR by that author). Jelly coat shape may be influenced by preservation (CLR, pers. obs), and therefore this trait may not be a good feature for diagnosing species. Moreover, the degree of carapace margin spinulation is also a highly variable trait within species (present study), although the discontinuous nature of the spinulation in the Greenland populations is noteworthy. Finally, the length of the postabdominal claws reported by Korovchinsky (2005, his Figure 1) is within the range of claw lengths observed for the H. gibberum s.s. populations studied here. Furthermore, the fact that we detected closely related lineages of H. gibberum s.s. in both northern Europe and North America suggests that similar lineages may be found in intervening arctic areas. Individuals from India were also not included in the present study. Consideration of the differences between either of the species in the H. gibberum complex and H. ramasarmii (Rao et al. 1998) is not currently possible due to the poor description of the latter species, lacking in detail. Korovchinsky (2004) labeled this species incertae sedis . We suggest that genetic evidence is required to determine if H. groenlandicum and H. ramasarmii are distinct species or if they are synonymous with described taxa. : Published as part of Rowe, Chad L., Adamowicz, Sarah J. & Hebert, Paul D. N., 2007, Three new cryptic species of the freshwater zooplankton genus Holopedium (Crustacea: Branchiopoda: Ctenopoda), revealed by genetic methods, pp. 1-49 in Zootaxa 1656 on pages 34-36, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.179852 : {"references": ["Birge, E. A. (1918) The water fleas (Cladocera). In: Ward, H. B. & Whipple, G. C. (Eds.), Fresh-water Biology, 1 st ed. John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 676 - 750.", "Pennak, R. W. (1953) Cladocera (Water Fleas). In: Pennak, R. W. (Ed.), Fresh-Water Invertebrates of the United States, 1 st ed., Ronald Press Company, New York. Chapter 16.", "Brooks, J. L. (1959) Cladocera. In: Edmondson, W. T. (Ed.), Fresh-water Biology, 2 nd ed. John Wiley and Sons, Inc., New York, 587 - 656.", "Pennak, R. W. (1978) Cladocera (Water Fleas). In: Pennak, R. W. (Ed.), Fresh-Water Invertebrates of the United States, 2 nd ed., John Wiley & Sons, New York. Chapter 16.", "Pennak, R. W. (1989) Cladocera (Water Fleas). In: Pennak, R. W. (Ed.), Fresh-Water Invertebrates of the United States. Protozoa to Mollusca, 3 rd ed., John Wiley & Sons, New York. Chapter 16.", "Korovchinsky, N. M. (1992) Sididae and Holopediidae (Crustacea: Daphniiformes). Guides to the Identification of the Microinvertebrates of the Continental Waters of the World. 3. SPB Academic Publishing, The Hague.", "Montvilo, J. A., Hegyi, M. A. & Kevin, M. J. (1987) Aspects of the anatomy of the jelly coat of Holopedium and certain other Cladocerans (Crustacea). Transactions of the American Miscroscopical Society, 106, 105 - 113.", "Hegyi, M. A. (1973) Aspects of the ecology, distribution, and systematics of the genus Holopedium (Cladocera, Crustacea). Ph. D. Dissertation. University of Tennessee.", "Coker, R. E. (1938) Anomalies of crustacean distribution in the Carolinas with a list of Cyclopoids of the general region of Chapel Hill, N. C. Journal of the Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society, 54, 76 - 87.", "Bunting, D. L. (1970) The Cladocera and Copepoda of Tennessee I. Limnetic Cladocera of east Tennessee and the TVA reservoirs. Journal of the Tennessee Academy of Science, 45, 2 - 5.", "Hebert, P. D. N. & Finston, T. L. (1997) Taxon diversity in the genus Holopedium (Crustacea: Cladocera) from the lakes of eastern North America. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences, 54, 1928 - 1936.", "Korovchinsky, N. M. (2005) New species of Holopedium Zaddach, 1855 (Crustacea: Cladocera: Ctenopoda) from Greenland. Journal of Limnology, 64, 103 - 112.", "Roen, U. (1962) Studies on freshwater Entomostraca in Greenland. II. Localities, ecology, and geographical distribution of species. Meddelelser om Gronland, 170, 1 - 249.", "Rao, L. M., Naidu, N. J. & Padmaja, G. (1998) Holopedium ramasarmii n. sp. (Cladocera: Holopedidae), a new cladoceran from freshwaters of Visakhapatnam. Uttar Pradesh Journal of Zoology, 18, 45 - 47.", "Korovchinsky, N. M. (2004) Vetvistousie rakoobraznije otriada Ctenopoda mirovoj fauni (morfologija, sistematika, ekologija, zoogeografija). KMK Press, Moscow. [Cladocerans of the order Ctenopoda of the world fauna (morphology, systematics, ecology, biogeography). In Russian.]."]} Text Arctic Greenland Zooplankton DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Greenland Curl ENVELOPE(-63.071,-63.071,-70.797,-70.797) Rowe ENVELOPE(-60.904,-60.904,-62.592,-62.592) Chapel Hill ENVELOPE(-57.976,-57.976,-63.685,-63.685) Gronland ENVELOPE(70.203,70.203,-49.626,-49.626) Røen ENVELOPE(8.551,8.551,62.905,62.905)