TWO NEW SPECIES OF DIAPTOMUS FROM ARCTIC AND SUBARCTIC CANADA (CALANOIDA, COPEPODA)

1958 ◽  
Vol 36 (5) ◽  
pp. 663-670
Author(s):  
Edward B. Reed

Diagnoses of two new species of fresh-water copepods are presented, Diaptomus wilsonae from ponds of the Hudson Bay lowlands, and Diaptomus victoriaensis from tundra ponds on Victoria Island, N.W.T.

1932 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 377-403 ◽  
Author(s):  
ROBERT ARNOLD WARDLE

The results are given of a survey of the cestode fauna of several thousand fishes representing thirty species common in the Hudson bay drainage system, particularly in the Hudson bay and in the larger lakes of Manitoba and Saskatchewan. The survey yielded twelve species of adult and seven species of larval cestodes, ten of which were identical with European species, while seven were purely North American. The incidence of infection was high and the individual intensity was heavy. The highest incidence and heaviest intensity occurred among nektonic types such as Hiodon, Leucichthys, Esox, Lucioperca and Salvelinus. Benthonic forms such as Catostomus, Ameiurus, Lota, Acipenser and Coregonus, were found relatively free from infection.The North American species of Cyathocephalus and Diplocotyle are regarded as identical with the European species C. truncatus and D. Olrikii; the species C. americanus Cooper, and Bothrimonus intermedius Cooper are rejected. The triaenophorid common in the area is regarded as Triaenophorus tricuspidatus (Bloch), and two morphae are recognized, microdentatus and megadentatus, the latter equivalent to T. robustus (Olsson). Bothriocephalus cuspidatus Cooper is regarded as comprising three sub-species, cuspidatus, hiodontos and luciopercae. The eubothriid cestode in Lota lota maculosa is regarded as identical with the European E. rugosum, but comprising two morphae, conformatus and deformatus. Two new species of Proteocephalus are described, namely coregoni from Coregonus atikameg, and luciopercae from Lucioperca vitreum.


1961 ◽  
Vol 35 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 275-284 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. Khan

Cercaria pseudocellata Szidat and Wigand, 1934; C. bilharziellae polonicae Szidat, 1929; C. kenilworthensis n.sp. and C. edgwarensis n.sp. are recorded from London. Descriptions of the two new species and a comparison with related forms is given.


1976 ◽  
Vol 13 (1) ◽  
pp. 157-178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert H. Workum ◽  
Thomas E. Bolton ◽  
Christopher R. Barnes

The Paleozoic sequence of Akpatok Island consists of a least 800 ft ([Formula: see text]) of exposed limestone, underlain by 1098 ft (334.7 m) of limestone, shale, and sandstone, as recognized in Premium Homestead Akpatok L-26 drill hole located on the west-central coast. The exposed carbonate rocks contain a megafaunal sequence and a limited conodont fauna ranging in age from late Middle (Barneveld) to early Upper (Maysvillian) Ordovician; a similar sequence is present within the upper Bad Cache Rapids – Churchill River Groups of Southampton Island, Hudson Bay. A conodont fauna present in the core 119 to 231 ft (36.3–70.4 m) above the Precambrian is of early Middle (Whiterockian) Ordovician age; a similar fauna is reported from the upper Ship Point Formation of Foxe Basin.One new species of the colonial coral Crenulites from the Maysvillian exposures and two new species of conodonts from the subsurface Whiterockian carbonate interbeds are erected.


1982 ◽  
Vol 60 (7) ◽  
pp. 1263-1278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Poulin ◽  
André Cardinal

More than 110 species of diatoms were identified from samples collected from Manitounuk Sound, Hudson Bay, in 1978. We presently deal with six genera, belonging to the family Naviculaceae; Diploneis (3 taxa), Gyrosigma (3 taxa), Pinnularia (18 taxa), Pleurosigma (4 taxa), Stauroneis (1 taxon), and Stenoneis (1 taxon).All the species were reevaluated and complete illustrated descriptions, biometric data, and worldwide distributions are given. Two new species and two varieties are described and a new combination is proposed.


Parasitology ◽  
1924 ◽  
Vol 16 (4) ◽  
pp. 441-451 ◽  
Author(s):  
W. N. F. Woodland

1. A new species of Bothriocephalus—B. pycnomerus—is described from the intestine of Ophiocephalus marulius Ham. Buch., from the Ganges and Jumna at Allahabad, India.2. B. pycnomerus closely resembles B. histiophorus (Shipley 1901; from the marine sword-fish Histiophorus) in structure but differs chiefly in the possession of an armed scolex and its crowded indistinct segmentation.3. Lühe's definition of the genus Bothriocephalus must be amended to include forms with armed scolices and forms in which the ventral uterine apertures are a-median and irregularly alternate.4. Two new species of Proteocephalidae are described which possess armed muscular rostella, and for these a new genus Gangesia is created and defined. The definitions of the Order Tetraphyllidea (Lühe 1910) and of the Family Proteocephalidae (La Rue 1914) must be amended to include forms possessing muscular rostella, armed or unarmed.5. These two new species—Gangesia wallago and G. macrones—were found in the intestines of Wallago attu Bleek and Macrones seenghala Sykes (both Siluroids) respectively, from the Ganges and Jumna at Allahabad.6. Southwell's “Ophryocotyle bengalensis,” from Ophiocephalus striatus, Labeo rohita and Wallago attu, is probably identical with Gangesia wallago.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document