Recent Cephalopoda Primary Types
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Ver. 2 March 2017 RECENT CEPHALOPOD PRIMARY TYPE SPECIMENS: A SEARCHING TOOL Compiled by Michael J. Sweeney Introduction. This document was first initiated for my personal use as a means to easily find data associated with the ever growing number of Recent cephalopod primary types. (Secondary types (paratypes, etc) are not included due to the large number of specimens involved.) With the excellent resources of the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution and the help of many colleagues, it grew in size and became a resource to share with others. Along the way, several papers were published that addressed some of the problems that were impeding research in cephalopod taxonomy. A common theme in each paper was the need to locate and examine types when publishing taxonomic descriptions; see Voss (1977:575), Okutani (2005:46), Norman and Hochberg (2005b:147). These publications gave me the impetus to revive the project and make it readily available. I would like to thank the many individuals who assisted me with their time and knowledge, especially Clyde Roper, Mike Vecchione, Eric Hochberg and Mandy Reid. Purpose. This document should be used as an aid for finding the location of types, type names, data, and their publication citation. It is not to be used as an authority in itself or to be cited as such. The lists below will change over time as more research is published and ambiguous names are resolved. It is only a search aid and data from this document should be independently verified prior to publication. My hope is that this document will make research easier and faster for the user. When errors or omissions are found (I’m sure there are many), please contact: [email protected]. Document format. Data are arranged in six sections: A. List of type repositories arranged alphabetically by institution acronym with repository address and author(s) of any published cephalopod type catalogs for each institution. B. List of species and subspecies names arranged alphabetically by intstitutional acronym. Data for each taxon entry is arranged in the following sequence: Taxon: published name listed as species, genus. (This entry is the name as originally published.) Publication: author of taxon, year published, page, and figures. (A secondary reference to the publication data may follow in brackets [ ].) Status: currently recognized name (as of the last update of this document) according to a recent published review of the taxon. Several common data element entries require clarification: If the original taxonomic name has not changed in any manner, the status will have an entry for the reviewer, e.g. [See Author, year] If the original taxonomic name has changed in gender or has been placed in another genus, the current taxonomic name is listed along with the reviewer in brackets, e.g. Octopus vulgaris Cuvier, 1797 [fide Robson (1929d:57)] If there has been no published review of the taxon to date, the entry will be: [Taxon not yet reviewed] Type: repository, primary type designation, catalog number. (A secondary reference to additional type data may follow in brackets [ ].) Locality: type locality. Given as a general locality only to facilitate comparison of type localities among species. C. List of nomina nuda. A list of taxa where no description of the taxon was given at the time of first publication. D. List of invalid taxonomic names. A list of rejected or suppressed names or names preoccupied by non-cephalopod names. E. List of taxonomic names, arranged by author and publication, with unresolved type repositories. Currently the repository of the primary type is unknown or in question. (I hope this section will be reduced over time!) F. Bibliography. Citations for all references of introduced species-group names and the supporting literature. Searching the document. A few tips to use when searching for specific names. If the user is looking for the type specimen of a specific species, the search should be species name followed by comma. Example:- “apama,” - will bring up Sepia apama Gray, 1849. If the user is looking for synonyms of a specific species, the search should be just the specific name (without comma). Example:- “apama” will bring up each species that has been synonymized with Sepia apama Gray, 1849. Remember that the gender ending may have changed from the original spelling. Example:- a search for “vulgaris,” will not find the entry for Octopus vulgaris, since the original spelling was “vulgare”. To assist in searching for cited publications, there is a reference version of the citation following each bibliographic entry. Example:- [Voss, 1960] [Voss and Pearcy, 1990] etc. A. Type Repositories. The names and abbreviations of the institutions that house the primary types of Recent cephalopod species in this document are given below. Also included are references [in brackets] to published cephalopod type catalogs or references pertaining to the respective institution’s collection. AIM- Auckland War Memorial Museum, Private Bag 92018, Auckland, NEW ZEALAND. AMS- Australian Museum, 1 William Street, Sydney NSW 2010, AUSTRALIA. [Rudman (1983); Sweeney, Roper and Hochberg (1988)] ANSP- Academy of Natural Sciences, 19th & The Parkway, Philadelphia, PA 19103, U.S.A. [Voss (1962e); Spamer and Bogan (1992)] ASIO- Academia Sinica, Institute of Oceanology, 7 Nankai Road, Qingdao, Shandong, CHINA. BMNH- The Natural History Museum, Cromwell Road, London SW7 5BD, ENGLAND (formerly British Museum (Natural History)). [Lipinski et al. (2000)] CASIZ- California Academy of Sciences, Golden Gate Park, San Francisco, CA 94118, U.S.A. [Smith (1974); Sweeney, Roper and Hochberg (1988)] CIFNET- Central Institute of Fisheries Nautical and Engineering Training, Foreshore Road, Pallimukku, Kochi, Kerala 682011, INDIA. CMRC- Center of Marine Resource Conservation, Fisheries College, Ocean University of China, Qingdao, Shandong, CHINA. CSIC- Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales, Madrid 28006, SPAIN. ESFM- Ege University Faculty of Fisheries Museum, Bornova, Izmir, 35100 TURKEY. FCRIRM- Fisheries College and Research Institute Reference Museum, Thoothukudi, Tamil Nadu, INDIA. FMHU- Fisheries Museum, Faculty of Fisheries, Hokkaido University, Nishi 5, Kita 8, Sapporo 060, Hakodate, JAPAN (includes Laboratory of Marine Zoology (HUMZ) collection). [Taki and Igarashi (1967)] FMNH- Field Museum of Natural History, Roosevelt Road & Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, IL 60605, U.S.A. (formerly Chicago Natural History Museum). FMT- Taiwan Provincial Museum, 2 Siangyang Road, Taipei, TAIWAN. FUMT- University of Tokyo, Department of Fisheries, University Museum-- see MSUT. HIO- Haiphong Institute of Oceanology, 246 Danang Street, Haiphong City, VIETNAM. HUJ- Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Mount Scopus, Jerusalem, 91905 ISRAEL. HUMZ- Hokkaido University Laboratory of Marine Zoology, Faculty of Fisheries-- see FMHU. ICM- Instituto de Ciencias del Mar, Passeig Maritim de la Barceloneta, 37-49. Barcelona E-08003, SPAIN. IFLC- Integrated Fisheries Project Marine Research Laboratory, Cochin, INDIA. [name changed to National Institute of Fisheries Post Harvest Technology and Training. Collections later transferred to Central Institue of Fisheries Nautical and Engineering Training (CIFNET)] IMC- Zoological Museum Calcutta, Indian Museum, 27 Jawaharal Nehru Road, Calcutta 700013, INDIA. IMNH- Icelandic Museum of Natural History, Reykjavik, ICELAND. IRSNB- Institut Royal des Sciences Naturelles de Belgique, Rue Vautier 29, B-1040 Brussels, BELGIUM (formerly Musee royal d'Histoire naturelle de Belgique). LS- Linnean Society of London, Burlington House, Piccadilly, London W1V 0LQ, ENGLAND. [Dodge (1953, 1959)] MB- Museu Nacional de Historia Natural, 58 Rua da Escola Politecnica, Lisboa 1250-102, PORTUGAL MCZ- Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02138, U.S.A. MFDT- Marine Fisheries Division, Department of Fisheries, 89/1 Charoen Krung 58, Bangkok 10120, THAILAND-- see PMBC. MHNB- Museum d'Histoire Naturelle, 2 place Bardineau, 33000 Bordeaux, FRANCE. MHNG- Museum d’Histoire Naturelle, Case Postale 284, CH-1211, Geneve 6, SWITZERLAND. [Mermod (1950), list of collections] MHNMC- Museo de Historia Natural Marina de Colombia, Santa Marta, INVEMAR Playa Salguero, COLOMBIA. MHNN- Museum d'Histoire Naturelle (Musee Barla), 60 Blvd Risso, 06300 Nice, FRANCE. MLP- Museo de La Plata, Paseo del Bosque, 1900 La Plata, Buenos Aires, ARGENTINA. MNHN- Museum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Laboratoire Biologie Invertebres Marins et Malacologie, 55, rue de Buffon, 75005 Paris 05, FRANCE. [Lu et al. (1995)] MNHNCL- Museo Nacional de Historia Natural, Parque Quinta Normal, Santiago, CHILE. MOM- Musee Oceanographique, Avenue Saint-Martin, Monaco-Ville, MC 98000, MONACO. [Belloc (1950)] MORG- Museu Oceanografico, Fundacao Universidade do Rio Grande, Caixa Postal 474, 96200 Rio Grande do Sul, BRAZIL. MSNG- Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Genova, Genova 16121, ITALY. MSUT / ZMUT / ZUMT- University Museum, University of Tokyo, Hongo 7-3-1, Bunkyoku, Tokyo 113, JAPAN (includes former Tokyo Imperial University (TIU) collection and University of Tokyo Department of Fisheries (FUMT) collection). [Gleadall (2003); Gleadall and Salcedo-Vargas (2004)] MZUF- Museo Zoologico de la Specola, Universita di Firenze, Via Romana 17, 50125 Firenze, ITALY. [Borri et al. (1988)] MZUS- Musee Zoologique, Universite Louis Pasteur & de la Ville de Strasbourg, 29 Boulevard de la Victoire, 67000 Strasbourg, FRANCE. [Johnson (1977) for Ortmann types] MZUSP- Museu