Skip to main content
Login
Library Home
My Profile
Links
Ask the Librarian
About
New Titles
Full Record
Back to Search Results
Understanding subterranean variability : the first genus of Bathynellidae (Bathynellacea, Crustacea) from Western Australia described through a morphological and multigene approach / G. Perina, A. I. Camacho, J. Huey, P. Horwitz and A. Koenders
Record no:
71995
Call no:
RP24415
Author:
Perina, Giulia
;
Huey, Joel
Citation:
INVERTEBRATE SYSTEMATICS. 2018 v.32 : 423-447;
Year:
2018
Subject:
Crustacea - Australia, Northwestern
;
Bathynellidae
;
Subterranean fauna - Western Australia - Pilbara
;
Notes:
PDF available for WAM staff
Type:
Reprint
Links:
Electronic Document
Electronic Document
Item availability
Search
Reserve
{ 1 } items found
Result
Links
Location
Library
Shelf no
Status
Year
Volume
Copy
1
Archives room
Western Australian Museum
Reprint boxes
On Shelf
Print
Mail
Similar Items
A new genus and six new species of the Parabathynellidae (Bathynellacea, Syncarida) from the Kimberley region, Western Australia
The Pilbara stygofauna : a synopsis / a report to the Water and Rivers Commission [by] W.F. Humphreys
Parabathynella stygia, n. g., n. sp., nouveau crustace cavernicole de la Serbie orientale.
Uber Bathynella und Parabathynella.
Notes on the morphology of Bathynella and some allied Crustacea.
Fauna of the Batu caves, Selangor. 8. A remarkable new cave-crustacean (Parabathynella malaya G. O. Sars, sp. nov.), with general remarks on the family Bathynellidae
Three new genera and nine new species of the subfamily Candoninae (Crustacea, Ostracoda, Podocopida) from the Pilbara region (Western Australia)
Towards a revision of Candoninae (Crustacea: Ostracoda): Australian representatives of the subfamily, with descriptions of three new genera and seven new species
A primitive representative of the Parabathynellidae (Bathynellacea, Syncarida) from the Yilgarn Craton of Western Australia
Comparative distribution of macromolluscs and macrocrustaceans in a north-western Australian mangrove system