taxonID	type	format	identifier	references	title	description	created	creator	contributor	publisher	audience	source	license	rightsHolder	datasetID
D65587BBFFB1FFBBFCE9F9939F2951BC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/StillImage	image/png	https://zenodo.org/record/5204201/files/figure.png	https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5204201	Figure 1. Distinguishing morphological characteristics of the leptothecate hydroid Halecium macrocephalum Allman, 1877. The colony is densely branched with a thick, strongly polysiphonic hydrocaulus (A; scale bar 10 mm). Notably, many hydrothecae are steeply sloped at an approximately 45◦ angle (B; scale bar 500 µm). The kidney-shaped nature of the female gonotheca (C; scale bar 1 mm). The characteristic sigmoidal and elongated shape of the male gonothecae form the basis for this redescription (D; scale bar 1 mm), a shape that differs significantly from that figured for the holotype by Allman (1877).	Figure 1. Distinguishing morphological characteristics of the leptothecate hydroid Halecium macrocephalum Allman, 1877. The colony is densely branched with a thick, strongly polysiphonic hydrocaulus (A; scale bar 10 mm). Notably, many hydrothecae are steeply sloped at an approximately 45◦ angle (B; scale bar 500 µm). The kidney-shaped nature of the female gonotheca (C; scale bar 1 mm). The characteristic sigmoidal and elongated shape of the male gonothecae form the basis for this redescription (D; scale bar 1 mm), a shape that differs significantly from that figured for the holotype by Allman (1877).	2011-09-30	Vervoort, W.;Henry, L. - A.;Nizinski, M. S.		Zenodo	biologists	Vervoort, W.;Henry, L. - A.;Nizinski, M. S.			
