Fargoa Dux
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Fargoa Dux
''Fargoa'' is a genus of very small sea snails, marine (ocean), marine gastropod mollusks in the tribe (biology), tribe Chrysallidini within the family Pyramidellidae. Life habits The members of ''Fargoa'' are ectoparasites on the Serpulidae, serpulid polychaete ''Hydroides''. Species Species within the genus ''Fargoa'' include: * ''Fargoa calesi'' (Bartsch, 1955) = ''Fargoa bushiana'' (Bartsch, 1909) - as ''Odostomia bushiana'', type species * ''Fargoa bartschi'' (Winkley, 1909) * ''Fargoa buijsei'' (de Jong & Coomans, 1988) * ''Fargoa dianthophila'' (H. W. Wells & M. J. Wells, 1961) * ''Fargoa dux'' (Dall & Bartsch, 1906) * ''Fargoa gaudens'' Odé, 1993 * ''Fargoa gibbosa'' (Bush, 1909) References External links ''Fargoa dianthophila'' - Serpulid odostome
Pyramidellidae {{Pyramidellidae-stub ...
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Paul Bartsch
Paul Bartsch (14 August 1871 Tłumaczów, Tuntschendorf, Silesia – 24 April 1960 McLean, Virginia) was an American Malacology, malacologist and carcinologist. He was named the last of those belonging to the "Descriptive Age of Malacology". Early life Bartsch emigrated with his parents to the United States in 1880, first to Missouri and then to Burlington, Iowa, Burlington, Iowa. As a child, he took up jobs in his spare time in several employments. He soon took an interest in nature, first by keeping a small menagerie at home, and during his high school years, collecting birds and preparing skins. He established a natural-history club in his home with a little museum and a workshop. By the time he went to the University of Iowa in 1893, he had collected 2,000 skins. Among Bartsch′s professors at the university were the geology, geologist Samuel Calvin (geologist), Samuel Calvin, the Botany, botanists Thomas H. Macbride and Bohumil Shimek, and the Zoology, zoologist Charles C ...
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