A Bibliography of the Crustacea Amphipoda D.E
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A Bibliography of the Crustacea Amphipoda D.E. Hurley NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF WATER AND ATMOSPHERIC RESEARCH LTD A Bibliography of the Crustacea Amphipoda by D.E. HURLEY 27 Clark Street, Khandallah Wellington 4, New Zealand Formerly of New Zealand Oceanographic Institute, DSIR, Wellington 1996 Cataloguing in publication HURLEY, D.E. A bibliography of the Crustacea Amphipoda by D.E. Hurley — Wellington : New Zealand Oceanographic Institute, 1996 I. Title Editor: Dennis P. Gordon Typeset by:Rose-Marie C. Thompson National Institute of Water and Atmospheric Research Ltd Received for publication June 1990 © NIWA Copyright 1996 2 CONTENTS Page INTRODUCTION 5 Origins of the Bibliography. .5 Transliteration of Authors' Names. .5 Geographical Names . 6 Double Publication . 6 Spelling . .6 Verification . .6 Books . 6 Keywords . .7 Indexing . .7 Scope . 7 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS 7 BIBLIOGRAPHY Commencing Entry A ABEL, Othenio ....................................... 1 – 8 B BAB'AK, Edward ................................... 68 – 15 C CAABRO, Jose ....................................... 937 – 47 D DA SCHIO, G. ........................................ 1489 – 69 E EALES, N.B............................................. 1827 – 84 F FABIANI, R. ........................................... 1942 – 89 G GABIE, Manfred .................................... 2129 – 96 H HAAN, W. De ........................................ 2520 – 113 I ICHIHARA, T. ....................................... 2950 – 131 J JÄÄSKELÄINEN, Viljo ........................ 3008 – 134 K KAISER, E.W. ......................................... 3137 – 140 L LA FOLLETTE, R................................... 3444 – 154 M MABILLOT, S......................................... 3764 – 167 N NABEREZHNYJ, A.I. ........................... 4324 – 191 O OBERMEYER, Hans .............................. 4489 – 198 P PAGENSTECHER, Heinrich ............... 4580 – 201 Q QADRI, S.U. ........................................... 4933 – 217 R RACOVITZA, E.G. ................................ 4941 – 217 S SABINE, Edward ................................... 5274 – 231 T TAIT, J. .................................................... 6367 – 274 U UCHIDA, H. ........................................... 6565 – 282 V VAAS, K.F. ............................................. 6618 – 285 W WAGE, G.H. ........................................... 6797 – 293 Y YABILONSKAYA, E.A. ........................ 7089 – 305 Z ZABOLOTSKIJ, A.A. ............................ 7126 – 307 INDEXES Geographical . 312 Subject . 319 3 COVER: Atylus taupo n.sp. (from Barnard 1967). INTRODUCTION Amphipods are small crustaceans, generally from 5 Barnard was then engaged on. The two were, to some to 10 mm in size, with great variety in form and struc- extent, planned as companion volumes. Back in New ture. There are over 6,000 species, known popularly Zealand, there was a limit to the library resources here by such names as sandhoppers, landhoppers, whale- at that time and it was a 1962 Nuffield Fellowship at lice, skeleton shrimps, ghost shrimps, scuds, and the British Museum (of Natural History) which freshwater shrimps. enabled me to complete the basic work — hence the The earliest references identified by Stebbing in the 1962 completion data. However, there were still many extensive bibliography in his monumental Challenger time-consuming problems involved in tracking down volumes, published in 1888, are those of Aristotle the numerous incomplete and misleading references (written between 335 and 332 BC) and Caius Plinius I had acquired from the citations of previous workers. Secundus, also known as Pliny the Elder, who died in Many were in obscure publications not held in 79 AD. libraries to which I had access and this made it diffi- Aristotle mentions the "little genus" of the Malac- cult to ensure completion within several years of the ostraca (thought to be Gammarus locusta) and also lice agreed-on cut-off date. It took a good ten years to be and fleas which eat fish. sure that all recalcitrant references had been tracked For fish, unless (they are disturbed) by the lice down and confirmed or rejected, especially since a and so-called fleas, are surprised in so tranquil a proportion of these in turn produced further refer- condition as to be easily taken, even in the hand. ences to be checked, and these, in their turn, still But now, if these are left (in the nets) during the further references. There were also difficuilt periods night, they (the fleas) being many in number fall upon and devour them. In the deep of the sea they during and after both world wars when the estab- grow in such multitudes that any piece of fish, if left lished abstracting journals missed relevant papers in on the ground, they devour. And often the fishermen European journals and the journals themselves have draw up round the bait as it were a globe of them become difficult to find. clinging to it. Much of the subsequent delay is accounted for by a series of false starts involved in practical difficulties Pliny describes ectoparasites on marine animals, in producing camera-ready copy from computerised which some ancient authors have taken to refer to the databases in the early 1970s, followed by nine years whale-louse, Cyamus. removed from research work, and, more recently, There is a small animal shaped like a scorpion, departmental restructuring and funding problems. of the size of a spider. This attaches itself with a spike Meanwhile, CD-Roms had been invented. In the final under the fin of both the tunny and the fish called stages, the discovery of a further subculture of sword-fish, which often exceeds the size of a references to European subterranean amphipods in dolphin, and torments them so painfully that they frequently jump out of the water into ships.* third-level and fringe scientific journals provided a new and unexpected challenge. However, the crustacean that this description It was therefore decided not to attempt to update immediately suggests is a parasitic copepod — Lutken this edition past 1962. If the opportunity should arise, suggested the species then known as Brachiella thynni. however, it might subsequently be useful to cover the The idea that Pliny was talking about cyamids appears period when computerised databases began to be fully to have come from Risso. operative, although recent experiences with the After Aristotle and Pliny, there are no known various databases available indicates that, while they references until Bellon, in 1553, who gives only a are invaluable for rapid entry and substantial cover- passing dubious lamention, based on the accounts of age, they do not yet ensure full coverage and it is still his two predecessors. possible for important references to be missed. Origins of the Bibliography Transliteration of Authors' Names I commenced this bibliography in 1953 while a Transliteration and translation, especially of Cyrillic Fulbright Fellow at Allan Hancock Foundation, titles, have provided their share of problems. University of Southern California, inspired partly by I had originally intended giving the title in the the list of amphipod genera and species which Jerry original Cyrillic as a supplement, but this proved mm impractical at a critical stage in preparation. If the * This version taken from Backham's 1967 translation in author (or the journal) has provided a non-Cyrillic Loeb's Classics series (Book ix, Chap. xxi, 54). title, I have used that, and, only if appropriate, a trans- 5 lation of the Cyrillic. Where the original journal gives Double Publication only a Cyrillic title, I have provided an English trans- It was not uncommon in the last century for the lation which is indicated by square brackets. same paper to appear in different journals, frequently Problems also arise where an author's name offers in different languages. I have normally accepted different transliteration possibilities from Cyrillic into these as separate references, especially where they English, German or French, especially as all three appeared in different languages in different years language variants actually exist in the literature. This although I have not done this inflexibly, depending is especially troublesome with the Russian Ю as an on the importance of the paper. Where the journal itself initial letter, allowing such possibilities as Ioffe, Joffe has alternative names or the paper has been reprinted or Yoffe; likewise Я can be rendered Ia, Ja or Ya, and or rebound in another series, I have confined myself Щ as Sch, Shch or even Schch. I have therefore to one reference with the lesser title given in brackets followed these conventions: as an alternative source. 1. If no translation has been provided by the author or the journal, I have used the method recommended by the Royal Society, modified and published as Spelling British Standard 2979: 1958. This was also used in the Spelling is as given in the original reference. Spell- World List of Scientific Publications and for my ing mistakes have not been corrected. purposes has two advantages over other possible systems. It comes closer to actual pronunciation than the ISO Verification (International Organisation for Standardization) system (Recommendation R9, 1968: International I began with the intention of checking all references System for the Transliteration of Slavic Cyrillic personally. Wherever possible this has been followed Characters and is therefore misleading for biblio- through. There are, however, a few references which, graphic purposes. The Russian character Х,