Leptochela Irrobusta
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Leptochela Irrobusta
''Leptochela'' is a genus of small, shallow-water shrimp from the family Pasiphaeidae. They are found in the Indo-Pacific region and the western Atlantic with an isolated species in Hawaii, they are absent from the eastern Atlantic Ocean and were absent from the eastern Pacific but specimens of a species widespread in the western Atlantic were collected from waters to the south of the tip of Baja California. Two species, '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' and '' Leptochela pugnax'' have invaded the eastern Mediterranean from the Red Sea through the Suez Canal and are thus classified as Lessepsian migrants. Species The genus is split into two subgenera ''Leptochela'' and ''Proboloura'' and contains 17 currently recognised extant species. ''Leptochela'' * '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' Paul'son, 1875 * '' Leptochela bermudensis'' Gurney, 1939 * '' Leptochela chacei'' Hayashi, 1995 * '' Leptochela crosnieri'' Hayashi, 1995 * '' Leptochela elevata'' Vereshchaka, 2024 * '' Leptochela g ...
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William Stimpson
William Stimpson (February 14, 1832 – May 26, 1872) was an American scientist. He was interested particularly in marine biology. Stimpson became an important early contributor to the work of the Smithsonian Institution and later, director of the Chicago Academy of Sciences. Biography Stimpson was born in Boston, Massachusetts to Herbert Hathorne Stimpson and Mary Ann Devereau Brewer. The Stimpsons were of the colonial stock of Massachusetts, the earliest known member of the family being James Stimpson, who was married in 1661, in Milton. His mother died at an early age. William Stimpson's father was an ingenious inventor, and a leading merchant of Boston in the mid decades of the nineteenth century, trading as "H. & F. Stimpson, stoves and furnaces, corner of Congress and Water Streets. It was he who invented the "Stimpson range", the first sheet-iron Kitchen stove, cooking stove, famous in its day throughout New England. He also made Rifle#19th century, improvements in rifl ...
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Leptochela Elevata
''Leptochela'' is a genus of small, shallow-water shrimp from the family Pasiphaeidae. They are found in the Indo-Pacific region and the western Atlantic with an isolated species in Hawaii, they are absent from the eastern Atlantic Ocean and were absent from the eastern Pacific but specimens of a species widespread in the western Atlantic were collected from waters to the south of the tip of Baja California. Two species, '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' and '' Leptochela pugnax'' have invaded the eastern Mediterranean from the Red Sea through the Suez Canal and are thus classified as Lessepsian migrants. Species The genus is split into two subgenera ''Leptochela'' and ''Proboloura'' and contains 17 currently recognised extant species. ''Leptochela'' * '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' Paul'son, 1875 * '' Leptochela bermudensis'' Gurney, 1939 * '' Leptochela chacei'' Hayashi, 1995 * '' Leptochela crosnieri'' Hayashi, 1995 * '' Leptochela elevata'' Vereshchaka, 2024 * '' Leptochela g ...
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Charles Spence Bate
Charles Spence Bate, (16 March 1819 – 29 July 1889) was a British zoologist and dentist. Life Charles Spence Bate was born at Trenick House near Truro, the son of Charles Bate (1789–1872) and Harriet Spence (1788–1879). Charles adopted "Spence Bate" as his surname, perhaps to distinguish himself from his father, and used that name consistently in his publications; it was also used consistently by his contemporaries to refer to him. He practiced dentistry first at Swansea, and then at Plymouth, taking over his father's practice. He was president of the Odontology Society. He was an authority on the Crustacea, for which he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society in 1861, and a frequent correspondent of Charles Darwin, mostly concerning their shared interest in barnacles. Together with John Obadiah Westwood, he wrote "''A history of the British sessile-eyed Crustacea''" in 1868. He wrote reports on the crustaceans collected during the HMS ''Challenger'' expedition of ...
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Leptochela Serratorbita
''Leptochela'' is a genus of small, shallow-water shrimp from the family Pasiphaeidae. They are found in the Indo-Pacific region and the western Atlantic with an isolated species in Hawaii, they are absent from the eastern Atlantic Ocean and were absent from the eastern Pacific but specimens of a species widespread in the western Atlantic were collected from waters to the south of the tip of Baja California. Two species, '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' and '' Leptochela pugnax'' have invaded the eastern Mediterranean from the Red Sea through the Suez Canal and are thus classified as Lessepsian migrants. Species The genus is split into two subgenera ''Leptochela'' and ''Proboloura'' and contains 17 currently recognised extant species. ''Leptochela'' * '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' Paul'son, 1875 * '' Leptochela bermudensis'' Gurney, 1939 * '' Leptochela chacei'' Hayashi, 1995 * '' Leptochela crosnieri'' Hayashi, 1995 * ''Leptochela elevata'' Vereshchaka, 2024 * '' Leptochela gr ...
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Johannes Govertus De Man
Johannes Govertus de Man (2 May 1850 in Middelburg – 9 January 1930 in Middelburg), was a Dutch biologist. He was assistant curator at the (Dutch for ''national natural history museum'') in Leiden, where he specialised in free-living nematodes and decapod crustaceans, although he also wrote papers on flatworms, sipunculids and, in his dissertation only, vertebrates. His change away from vertebrates disappointed the director of the museum, and de Man left his job there after eleven years. For the rest of his life, de Man worked at his parents' house in Middelburg and later at a house near the shore at Yerseke in the Oosterschelde estuary, relying on his family's private income. Taxa named after de Man *'' Anachis demani'' De Jong & Coomans, 1988 *'' Anchistus demani'' Kemp, 1922 *'' Araeolaimus demani'' (Schuurmans-Stekhoven, 1950) Wieser, 1956 *'' Axonolaimus demani'' De Coninck & Stekhoven, 1933 *'' Caridina demani'' J. Roux, 1911 *'' Charybdis (Goniosoma) demani'' Leene, 19 ...
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Leptochela Papulata
''Leptochela'' is a genus of small, shallow-water shrimp from the family Pasiphaeidae. They are found in the Indo-Pacific region and the western Atlantic with an isolated species in Hawaii, they are absent from the eastern Atlantic Ocean and were absent from the eastern Pacific but specimens of a species widespread in the western Atlantic were collected from waters to the south of the tip of Baja California. Two species, ''Leptochela aculeocaudata'' and ''Leptochela pugnax'' have invaded the eastern Mediterranean from the Red Sea through the Suez Canal and are thus classified as Lessepsian migration, Lessepsian migrants. Species The genus is split into two subgenera ''Leptochela'' and ''Proboloura'' and contains 17 currently recognised extant species. ''Leptochela'' * ''Leptochela aculeocaudata'' Paul'son, 1875 * ''Leptochela bermudensis'' Robert Gurney, Gurney, 1939 * ''Leptochela chacei'' Hayashi, 1995 * ''Leptochela crosnieri'' Hayashi, 1995 * ''Leptochela elevata'' Vereshc ...
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Leptochela Japonica
''Leptochela'' is a genus of small, shallow-water shrimp from the family Pasiphaeidae. They are found in the Indo-Pacific region and the western Atlantic with an isolated species in Hawaii, they are absent from the eastern Atlantic Ocean and were absent from the eastern Pacific but specimens of a species widespread in the western Atlantic were collected from waters to the south of the tip of Baja California. Two species, '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' and '' Leptochela pugnax'' have invaded the eastern Mediterranean from the Red Sea through the Suez Canal and are thus classified as Lessepsian migrants. Species The genus is split into two subgenera ''Leptochela'' and ''Proboloura'' and contains 17 currently recognised extant species. ''Leptochela'' * '' Leptochela aculeocaudata'' Paul'son, 1875 * '' Leptochela bermudensis'' Gurney, 1939 * '' Leptochela chacei'' Hayashi, 1995 * '' Leptochela crosnieri'' Hayashi, 1995 * ''Leptochela elevata'' Vereshchaka, 2024 * '' Leptochela gr ...
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