Callianassa

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Callianassa
Temporal range: 183.0–0 Ma
Callianassa turnerana.png
Callianassa turnerana
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Crustacea
Class: Malacostraca
Order: Decapoda
Family: Callianassidae
Subfamily:
Genus: Callianassa
Leach, 1814 [1]
Synonyms [2]
  • Gebios Risso, 1822
  • Montagua Leach, 1814

Callianassa is a genus of mud shrimps, in the family Callianassidae. Three of the species in this genus (, C. tyrrhena and ) have been split off into a new genus, Pestarella,[3] while others such as Callianassa filholi have been moved to Biffarius.[4]

Species[]

Forty-six species are currently recognised in the genus Callianassa:[2]

  • Sakai, 1988
  • A. Milne-Edwards, 1861
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Dworschak, 2003
  • Kensley, 1974
  • Sakai, 2005
  • Woodward, 1869
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2005
  • Le Loeuff & Intes, 1974
  • Sakai, 2005
  • Nobili, 1905
  • Sakai, 1999
  • De Man, 1905
  • De Man, 1905
  • Ortmann, 1892
  • Alcock & Anderson, 1899
  • Poore, 1975
  • De Man, 1905
  • Sakai, 1967
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Le Loeuff & Intes, 1974
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2004
  • De Man, 1905
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Edmondson, 1944
  • Sakai, 1988
  • Sakai, 2005
  • Sakai, 2004
  • Sakai, 2002
  • De Man, 1905
  • De Man, 1928
  • Glaessner, 1929
  • Poore, 2008
  • Sakai, 2005
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Callianassa subterranea (Montagu, 1808)
  • Sakai, 2005
  • Sakai, 2002
  • Sakai, 2005
  • Sakai, 2005

Several species are known from the fossil record, including:

  • Callianassa elegans Bohm 1922 (Java)[5][6]

References[]

  1. ^ "Callianassa". Integrated Taxonomic Information System.
  2. ^ a b Gary C. B. Poore & Michael Türkay (2010). "Callianassa Leach, 1814". World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved September 1, 2010.
  3. ^ Nguyen Ngoc-Ho (2003). "European and Mediterranean Thalassinidea (Crustacea, Decapoda)" (PDF). Zoosystema. 25 (3): 439–555. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-11-19. Retrieved 2007-08-17.
  4. ^ Gary C. B. Poore (2010). "Biffarius filholi (A. Milne-Edwards, 1878)". World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved May 26, 2010.
  5. ^ Böhm, J. (1922). Arthropoda. Crustacea. In: Martin, K. (ed.) Die Fossilien von Java. Sammlungen des geologischen Reichsmuseums in Leiden, neue Folge. 1: 521–535.
  6. ^ Callianassa elegans at fossilworks.org
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