Nannoniscus Sars 1870

Genus: Nannoniscus Sars, 1870. Nannoniscus Sars, 1870: 164; Hansen, 1916: 87–89; Gurjanova, 1932: 51; Menzies, 1962b: 133; Birstein, 1963: 78; Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981: 241; Kussakin, 1999: 68; Wilson, 2008: 13; Saetoniscus Brandt, 2002: 11. Type species: Nannoniscus oblongus Hansen, 1916. Sp...

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Main Authors: Kaiser, Stefanie, Kihara, Terue Cristina, Brix, Saskia, Mohrbeck, Inga, Janssen, Annika, Jennings, Robert M.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5639167
https://zenodo.org/record/5639167
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5639167
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
Malacostraca
Isopoda
Nannoniscidae
Nannoniscus
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Isopoda
Nannoniscidae
Nannoniscus
Kaiser, Stefanie
Kihara, Terue Cristina
Brix, Saskia
Mohrbeck, Inga
Janssen, Annika
Jennings, Robert M.
Nannoniscus Sars 1870
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Arthropoda
Malacostraca
Isopoda
Nannoniscidae
Nannoniscus
description Genus: Nannoniscus Sars, 1870. Nannoniscus Sars, 1870: 164; Hansen, 1916: 87–89; Gurjanova, 1932: 51; Menzies, 1962b: 133; Birstein, 1963: 78; Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981: 241; Kussakin, 1999: 68; Wilson, 2008: 13; Saetoniscus Brandt, 2002: 11. Type species: Nannoniscus oblongus Hansen, 1916. Species included (see also Table 3): Nannoniscus acanthurus Birstein, 1963, Nannoniscus aequiremus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus affinis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus analis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus antennaspinis Brandt, 2002, Nannoniscus arcticus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus arctoabyssalis Just, 1980, Nannoniscus australis Vanhöffen, 1914, Nannoniscus bidens Vanhöffen, 1914, Nannoniscus bidens sensu Brandt, 1992, Nannoniscus brenkei Kaiser, Brix & Jennings sp. nov., Nannoniscus camayae Menzies, 1962, Nannoniscus caspius Sars, 1899, Nannoniscus cristatus Mezhov, 1986, Nannoniscus detrimentus Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus hilario Kaiser & Kihara sp. nov., Nannoniscus inermis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus laevis Menzies, 1962, Nannoniscus laticeps Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus magdae Kaiser, Brix & Jennings sp. nov., Nannoniscus menoti Kaiser, Janssen & Mohrbeck sp. nov., Nannoniscus menziesi Mezhov, 1986, Nannoniscus meteori (Brandt, 2002), Nannoniscus minutus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus muscarius Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus oblongus Sars, 1870, Nannoniscus ovatus Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus pedro Kaiser, Brix & Kihara sp. nov., Nannoniscus perunis Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus plebejus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus profundus Svavarsson, 1982, Nannoniscus reticulatus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus simplex Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus spinicornis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus teres Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981. Diagnosis (modified from Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981: 241; Wilson, 2008: 14): Pereonal tergites projecting laterally from pereopodal coxae; pereonites 6–7 dorsal articulation absent medially. Pleotelson distinctly shorter than pereonites 5–7 combined. Antennula with 5 segments, distal article bulbous, article 4 distal margin with ventromedial angular projection. Mandible with 3-segmented palp. Pereopods I–II equally robust. Uropods biramous or rarely uniramous. Distribution: Known records from the Arctic, Atlantic, Pacific and Southern oceans and the Caspian Sea, although likely to be globally distributed. Although few Nannoniscus species are described from the continental shelf (≥ 75 m), they occur mainly at slope and abyssal depth, with two species recorded from the hadal Zone ( N. ovatus Menzies & George, 1972 and N. perunis Menzies & George, 1972; Table 3). Remarks: Species described herein were assigned to Nannoniscus due to the following characters: antennula article 4 distal margin with ventromedial angular projection, antennula terminal article 5 bulbous, pereopods 1 and 2 equally robust, lack of ventral articulation between pereonites 6 and 7. However, the genus Nannoniscus , thus far, is largely defined by a combination of plesiomorphic characters, such as uropods inserting posteroventrally close to the anus (Wilson, 2008), defining the family Nannoniscidae, as well as synapomorphic characters, such as a bulbous terminal article of the antennula, a specialized antennula article 4 and fusion of pereonites 6 and 7 that characterize a cluster of nannoniscid genera containing Nannoniscus , Nannonisconus Schultz, 1966, Nymphodora Kaiser, 2009, Rapaniscus Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981 and Regabellator Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981. Wilson (2008) states that the broad body form with laterally projecting pereonite tergites is present in all Nannoniscus species. While this is true for some species (e.g. the type species N. oblongus ), others have a slender body (body length> 4.5 times pereonite 1 width) with lateral tergites that extend only slightly, if at all (e.g. N. ovatus , N. perunis , N. menziesi , N. meteori and species described herein). Overall, the genus comprises species with diverse morphologies mostly referring to the shape of the pleotelson and the presence of a ventral spine on the female operculum and/or pereonite 7. While N. oblongus possesses a ventral opercular spine, there are several species, where a spine is overall absent (e.g. N. aequiremis , N. arctoabyssalis , N. cristatus , N. inermis ), or one occurring on the seventh pereonite ( N. australis , N. minutus , N. muscarius , N. spinicornis , N. reticulatus , N. plebejus , N. affinis , N. profundus , N. caspius ). In N. reticulatus , ventral spines are present both on the female operculum and the seventh pereonite. The presence or absence of a ventral opercular spine has been found a useful character to separate the nannoniscid genera Ketosoma and Thaumastosoma Hessler, 1970 (Kaiser et al. , 2018). Equally, the position of ventral spines on pereonites 6 and 7 represents an apomorphy of Regabellator. In contrast, in Rapaniscus species, similar to Nannoniscus , the position of the ventral spines is variable, present on either pereonite 7 [ Rapaniscus crassipes (Hansen, 1916), Rapaniscus dewdneyi Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981] or the operculum ( Rapaniscus multisetosus Brandt, 2002). Further differences exist in the presence or absence of the uropodal exopodite among Nannoniscus species; most species within the genus possess biramous uropods, while a lack a uropodal exopod is reported for two species ( N. ovatus and in one new Nannoniscus species described below). Presence of uniramous or biramous uropods has been used as a segregating character to define genera within the munnopsid subfamily Ilyarachninae (Merrin, 2007); however, there are several genera (e.g. within Desmosomatidae, Paramunnidae), where both character states occur (Just & Wilson, 2007; Brix & Bruce, 2008; Kaiser & Marner, 2012 and discussion therein). Nannoniscus species described below show a gradual reduction of the exopodite (well-developed vs. minute vs. absent), thus, at least in Nannoniscus , the presence or absence of the uropodal exopodite represents a valuable character at the species, but not at the generic level [see also Brix & Bruce (2008) for desmosomatids]. Siebenaller & Hessler (1981) and Brandt (2002) already discussed the likely paraphyly of Nannoniscus particularly referring to “odd” species such as N. muscarius (with a strongly produced coxal spine) and N. ovatus (= uniramous uropods). However, these species are notsingle occurrences but representative for this heterogeneous group. Up to now there has been no rigorous phylogenetic assessment of all Nannoniscus species, and it is not the purpose of the present study to address this issue. Nevertheless, as a prelude, the position of N. coalescus (Menzies & George, 1972) is discussed. The species had been first described as Desmosoma coalescum in the family Desmosomatidae and was later transferred to Nannoniscus by Siebenaller & Hessler, 1977 due to the bulbous terminal article of the antennula as well as fusion of pereonites 6 and 7. Our morphological analyses of the holotype alongside line drawings made by Menzies & George (1972: p. 9.48) suggest the species belongs to Rapaniscus owing to a broadened pereopod I carpus bearing several long robust setae (Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981). Therefore, N. coalescus is herein transferred to Rapaniscus . : Published as part of Kaiser, Stefanie, Kihara, Terue Cristina, Brix, Saskia, Mohrbeck, Inga, Janssen, Annika & Jennings, Robert M., 2021, Species boundaries and phylogeographic patterns in new species of Nannoniscus (Janiroidea: Nannoniscidae) from the equatorial Pacific nodule province inferred from mtDNA and morphology, pp. 1020-1071 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 193 on pages 1029-1033, DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa174, http://zenodo.org/record/5639160 : {"references": ["Birstein JA. 1963. Deep-sea isopod crustaceans of the northwestern Pacific Ocean. Institute of Oceanology of the U. S. S. R., Akademii Nauk: Moscow [in Russian with English summary]: 213 pp.", "Siebenaller JF, Hessler RR. 1981. The genera of the Nannoniscidae (Isopoda, Asellota). Transactions of the San Diego Society of Natural History 19: 227 - 250.", "Wilson GDF. 2008. A review of taxonomic concepts in the Nannoniscidae (Isopoda, Asellota), with a key to the genera and a description of Nannoniscus oblongus Sars. Zootaxa 1680: 1 - 24.", "Brandt A. 2002. New species of Nannoniscidae (Crustacea, Isopoda) and Saetoniscus n. gen. from the deep sea of the Angola Basin. Zootaxa 88: 1 - 36.", "Mezhov BV. 1986. Bathyal and abyssal Nannoniscidae and Desmosomatidae (Isopoda, Asellota) from Alaska Bay. Archives of the Zoological Museum 1986: 126 - 167.", "Menzies RJ, George RY. 1972. Isopod Crustacea of the Peru- Chile Trench. Anton Bruun Report 9: 1 - 124.", "Hessler RR. 1970. The Desmosomatidae (Isopoda, Asellota) of the Gay Head-Bermuda transect. Bulletin of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography 15: 1 - 185.", "Kaiser S, Brix S, Kihara TC, Janssen A, Jennings RM. 2018. Integrative species delimitation in the deep-sea genus Thaumastosoma Hessler, 1970 (Isopoda, Asellota, Nannoniscidae) reveals a new genus and species from the Atlantic and central Pacific abyss. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography 148: 151 - 179.", "Merrin KL. 2007. New Zealand and south-east Australian Ilyarachninae (Isopoda: Asellota: Munnopsidae) and their worldwide relationships. Ph. D. Thesis, University of Canterbury.", "Just J, Wilson GDF. 2007. Revision of Austrosignum Hodgson and Munnogonium George & Stromberg (Paramunnidae) with descriptions of eight new genera and two new species (Crustacea: Isopoda: Asellota). Zootaxa 1515: 1 - 29.", "Brix S, Bruce NL. 2008. Prochelator tupuhi sp. nov., the first record of Desmosomatidae Sars, 1897 (Crustacea: Isopoda) from New Zealand waters. Zootaxa 1866: 482 - 492.", "Kaiser S, Marner M. 2012. A new species of Pentaceration Just, 2009 (Isopoda, Asellota, Paramunnidae) from the Challenger Plateau, New Zealand (Tasman Sea). Zoosystematics and Evolution 88: 171 - 184.", "Siebenaller JF, Hessler RR. 1977. The Nannoniscidae (Isopoda, Asellota): Hebefustis n. gen. and Nannoniscoides Hansen. Transactions of San Diego Society of Natural History 19: 17 - 44."]}
format Text
author Kaiser, Stefanie
Kihara, Terue Cristina
Brix, Saskia
Mohrbeck, Inga
Janssen, Annika
Jennings, Robert M.
author_facet Kaiser, Stefanie
Kihara, Terue Cristina
Brix, Saskia
Mohrbeck, Inga
Janssen, Annika
Jennings, Robert M.
author_sort Kaiser, Stefanie
title Nannoniscus Sars 1870
title_short Nannoniscus Sars 1870
title_full Nannoniscus Sars 1870
title_fullStr Nannoniscus Sars 1870
title_full_unstemmed Nannoniscus Sars 1870
title_sort nannoniscus sars 1870
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2021
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5639167
https://zenodo.org/record/5639167
long_lat ENVELOPE(34.363,34.363,67.123,67.123)
ENVELOPE(-63.783,-63.783,-69.150,-69.150)
ENVELOPE(61.911,61.911,-73.437,-73.437)
ENVELOPE(166.083,166.083,-78.117,-78.117)
ENVELOPE(72.556,72.556,-70.145,-70.145)
ENVELOPE(-75.760,-75.760,-53.123,-53.123)
geographic Arctic
Pacific
New Zealand
Inga
Scripps
Menzies
Hodgson
Jennings
Chile Trench
geographic_facet Arctic
Pacific
New Zealand
Inga
Scripps
Menzies
Hodgson
Jennings
Chile Trench
genre Arctic
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Alaska
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5639167 2023-05-15T15:21:01+02:00 Nannoniscus Sars 1870 Kaiser, Stefanie Kihara, Terue Cristina Brix, Saskia Mohrbeck, Inga Janssen, Annika Jennings, Robert M. 2021 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5639167 https://zenodo.org/record/5639167 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/5639160 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF47360BFF90FF92050CFFD6FF9EAB1E http://table.plazi.org/id/DFA8AFEDFF9DFF9F059DFF12FADDABC4 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/7B0F5E352647FFD4FA3DFEE1330EFEB3 http://zoobank.org/A68FDF1F-2825-47D8-B9CE-FEB8432896DF https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa174 http://zenodo.org/record/5639160 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FF47360BFF90FF92050CFFD6FF9EAB1E http://table.plazi.org/id/DFA8AFEDFF9DFF9F059DFF12FADDABC4 http://treatment.plazi.org/id/7B0F5E352647FFD4FA3DFEE1330EFEB3 http://zoobank.org/A68FDF1F-2825-47D8-B9CE-FEB8432896DF https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5639166 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Arthropoda Malacostraca Isopoda Nannoniscidae Nannoniscus Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2021 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5639167 https://doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa174 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5639166 2022-02-08T13:57:03Z Genus: Nannoniscus Sars, 1870. Nannoniscus Sars, 1870: 164; Hansen, 1916: 87–89; Gurjanova, 1932: 51; Menzies, 1962b: 133; Birstein, 1963: 78; Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981: 241; Kussakin, 1999: 68; Wilson, 2008: 13; Saetoniscus Brandt, 2002: 11. Type species: Nannoniscus oblongus Hansen, 1916. Species included (see also Table 3): Nannoniscus acanthurus Birstein, 1963, Nannoniscus aequiremus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus affinis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus analis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus antennaspinis Brandt, 2002, Nannoniscus arcticus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus arctoabyssalis Just, 1980, Nannoniscus australis Vanhöffen, 1914, Nannoniscus bidens Vanhöffen, 1914, Nannoniscus bidens sensu Brandt, 1992, Nannoniscus brenkei Kaiser, Brix & Jennings sp. nov., Nannoniscus camayae Menzies, 1962, Nannoniscus caspius Sars, 1899, Nannoniscus cristatus Mezhov, 1986, Nannoniscus detrimentus Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus hilario Kaiser & Kihara sp. nov., Nannoniscus inermis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus laevis Menzies, 1962, Nannoniscus laticeps Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus magdae Kaiser, Brix & Jennings sp. nov., Nannoniscus menoti Kaiser, Janssen & Mohrbeck sp. nov., Nannoniscus menziesi Mezhov, 1986, Nannoniscus meteori (Brandt, 2002), Nannoniscus minutus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus muscarius Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus oblongus Sars, 1870, Nannoniscus ovatus Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus pedro Kaiser, Brix & Kihara sp. nov., Nannoniscus perunis Menzies & George, 1972, Nannoniscus plebejus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus profundus Svavarsson, 1982, Nannoniscus reticulatus Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus simplex Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus spinicornis Hansen, 1916, Nannoniscus teres Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981. Diagnosis (modified from Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981: 241; Wilson, 2008: 14): Pereonal tergites projecting laterally from pereopodal coxae; pereonites 6–7 dorsal articulation absent medially. Pleotelson distinctly shorter than pereonites 5–7 combined. Antennula with 5 segments, distal article bulbous, article 4 distal margin with ventromedial angular projection. Mandible with 3-segmented palp. Pereopods I–II equally robust. Uropods biramous or rarely uniramous. Distribution: Known records from the Arctic, Atlantic, Pacific and Southern oceans and the Caspian Sea, although likely to be globally distributed. Although few Nannoniscus species are described from the continental shelf (≥ 75 m), they occur mainly at slope and abyssal depth, with two species recorded from the hadal Zone ( N. ovatus Menzies & George, 1972 and N. perunis Menzies & George, 1972; Table 3). Remarks: Species described herein were assigned to Nannoniscus due to the following characters: antennula article 4 distal margin with ventromedial angular projection, antennula terminal article 5 bulbous, pereopods 1 and 2 equally robust, lack of ventral articulation between pereonites 6 and 7. However, the genus Nannoniscus , thus far, is largely defined by a combination of plesiomorphic characters, such as uropods inserting posteroventrally close to the anus (Wilson, 2008), defining the family Nannoniscidae, as well as synapomorphic characters, such as a bulbous terminal article of the antennula, a specialized antennula article 4 and fusion of pereonites 6 and 7 that characterize a cluster of nannoniscid genera containing Nannoniscus , Nannonisconus Schultz, 1966, Nymphodora Kaiser, 2009, Rapaniscus Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981 and Regabellator Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981. Wilson (2008) states that the broad body form with laterally projecting pereonite tergites is present in all Nannoniscus species. While this is true for some species (e.g. the type species N. oblongus ), others have a slender body (body length> 4.5 times pereonite 1 width) with lateral tergites that extend only slightly, if at all (e.g. N. ovatus , N. perunis , N. menziesi , N. meteori and species described herein). Overall, the genus comprises species with diverse morphologies mostly referring to the shape of the pleotelson and the presence of a ventral spine on the female operculum and/or pereonite 7. While N. oblongus possesses a ventral opercular spine, there are several species, where a spine is overall absent (e.g. N. aequiremis , N. arctoabyssalis , N. cristatus , N. inermis ), or one occurring on the seventh pereonite ( N. australis , N. minutus , N. muscarius , N. spinicornis , N. reticulatus , N. plebejus , N. affinis , N. profundus , N. caspius ). In N. reticulatus , ventral spines are present both on the female operculum and the seventh pereonite. The presence or absence of a ventral opercular spine has been found a useful character to separate the nannoniscid genera Ketosoma and Thaumastosoma Hessler, 1970 (Kaiser et al. , 2018). Equally, the position of ventral spines on pereonites 6 and 7 represents an apomorphy of Regabellator. In contrast, in Rapaniscus species, similar to Nannoniscus , the position of the ventral spines is variable, present on either pereonite 7 [ Rapaniscus crassipes (Hansen, 1916), Rapaniscus dewdneyi Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981] or the operculum ( Rapaniscus multisetosus Brandt, 2002). Further differences exist in the presence or absence of the uropodal exopodite among Nannoniscus species; most species within the genus possess biramous uropods, while a lack a uropodal exopod is reported for two species ( N. ovatus and in one new Nannoniscus species described below). Presence of uniramous or biramous uropods has been used as a segregating character to define genera within the munnopsid subfamily Ilyarachninae (Merrin, 2007); however, there are several genera (e.g. within Desmosomatidae, Paramunnidae), where both character states occur (Just & Wilson, 2007; Brix & Bruce, 2008; Kaiser & Marner, 2012 and discussion therein). Nannoniscus species described below show a gradual reduction of the exopodite (well-developed vs. minute vs. absent), thus, at least in Nannoniscus , the presence or absence of the uropodal exopodite represents a valuable character at the species, but not at the generic level [see also Brix & Bruce (2008) for desmosomatids]. Siebenaller & Hessler (1981) and Brandt (2002) already discussed the likely paraphyly of Nannoniscus particularly referring to “odd” species such as N. muscarius (with a strongly produced coxal spine) and N. ovatus (= uniramous uropods). However, these species are notsingle occurrences but representative for this heterogeneous group. Up to now there has been no rigorous phylogenetic assessment of all Nannoniscus species, and it is not the purpose of the present study to address this issue. Nevertheless, as a prelude, the position of N. coalescus (Menzies & George, 1972) is discussed. The species had been first described as Desmosoma coalescum in the family Desmosomatidae and was later transferred to Nannoniscus by Siebenaller & Hessler, 1977 due to the bulbous terminal article of the antennula as well as fusion of pereonites 6 and 7. Our morphological analyses of the holotype alongside line drawings made by Menzies & George (1972: p. 9.48) suggest the species belongs to Rapaniscus owing to a broadened pereopod I carpus bearing several long robust setae (Siebenaller & Hessler, 1981). Therefore, N. coalescus is herein transferred to Rapaniscus . : Published as part of Kaiser, Stefanie, Kihara, Terue Cristina, Brix, Saskia, Mohrbeck, Inga, Janssen, Annika & Jennings, Robert M., 2021, Species boundaries and phylogeographic patterns in new species of Nannoniscus (Janiroidea: Nannoniscidae) from the equatorial Pacific nodule province inferred from mtDNA and morphology, pp. 1020-1071 in Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 193 on pages 1029-1033, DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlaa174, http://zenodo.org/record/5639160 : {"references": ["Birstein JA. 1963. Deep-sea isopod crustaceans of the northwestern Pacific Ocean. Institute of Oceanology of the U. S. S. R., Akademii Nauk: Moscow [in Russian with English summary]: 213 pp.", "Siebenaller JF, Hessler RR. 1981. The genera of the Nannoniscidae (Isopoda, Asellota). Transactions of the San Diego Society of Natural History 19: 227 - 250.", "Wilson GDF. 2008. A review of taxonomic concepts in the Nannoniscidae (Isopoda, Asellota), with a key to the genera and a description of Nannoniscus oblongus Sars. Zootaxa 1680: 1 - 24.", "Brandt A. 2002. New species of Nannoniscidae (Crustacea, Isopoda) and Saetoniscus n. gen. from the deep sea of the Angola Basin. Zootaxa 88: 1 - 36.", "Mezhov BV. 1986. Bathyal and abyssal Nannoniscidae and Desmosomatidae (Isopoda, Asellota) from Alaska Bay. Archives of the Zoological Museum 1986: 126 - 167.", "Menzies RJ, George RY. 1972. Isopod Crustacea of the Peru- Chile Trench. Anton Bruun Report 9: 1 - 124.", "Hessler RR. 1970. The Desmosomatidae (Isopoda, Asellota) of the Gay Head-Bermuda transect. Bulletin of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography 15: 1 - 185.", "Kaiser S, Brix S, Kihara TC, Janssen A, Jennings RM. 2018. Integrative species delimitation in the deep-sea genus Thaumastosoma Hessler, 1970 (Isopoda, Asellota, Nannoniscidae) reveals a new genus and species from the Atlantic and central Pacific abyss. Deep Sea Research Part II: Topical Studies in Oceanography 148: 151 - 179.", "Merrin KL. 2007. New Zealand and south-east Australian Ilyarachninae (Isopoda: Asellota: Munnopsidae) and their worldwide relationships. Ph. D. Thesis, University of Canterbury.", "Just J, Wilson GDF. 2007. Revision of Austrosignum Hodgson and Munnogonium George & Stromberg (Paramunnidae) with descriptions of eight new genera and two new species (Crustacea: Isopoda: Asellota). Zootaxa 1515: 1 - 29.", "Brix S, Bruce NL. 2008. Prochelator tupuhi sp. nov., the first record of Desmosomatidae Sars, 1897 (Crustacea: Isopoda) from New Zealand waters. Zootaxa 1866: 482 - 492.", "Kaiser S, Marner M. 2012. A new species of Pentaceration Just, 2009 (Isopoda, Asellota, Paramunnidae) from the Challenger Plateau, New Zealand (Tasman Sea). Zoosystematics and Evolution 88: 171 - 184.", "Siebenaller JF, Hessler RR. 1977. The Nannoniscidae (Isopoda, Asellota): Hebefustis n. gen. and Nannoniscoides Hansen. Transactions of San Diego Society of Natural History 19: 17 - 44."]} Text Arctic Alaska DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Pacific New Zealand Inga ENVELOPE(34.363,34.363,67.123,67.123) Scripps ENVELOPE(-63.783,-63.783,-69.150,-69.150) Menzies ENVELOPE(61.911,61.911,-73.437,-73.437) Hodgson ENVELOPE(166.083,166.083,-78.117,-78.117) Jennings ENVELOPE(72.556,72.556,-70.145,-70.145) Chile Trench ENVELOPE(-75.760,-75.760,-53.123,-53.123)