identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03DD6331FF89FF97259E91466292FF79.text	03DD6331FF89FF97259E91466292FF79.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Fiersiphontina	<div><p>Fiersiphontina gen. nov.</p><p>Diagnosis. Female. Body cylindrical, caudal rami narrowing distally, shorter than anal somite, carrying three distinct hook-like process anterior to seta VII, one small process anterior to seta I, one process on distal outer corner, two ventral distal processes, and seven setae; seta V robust, dorsally bent, and strongly sclerotised. Genital field with one small seta on each P6 vestige and copulatory pore distinctly posterior to the transverse ridge. Antennule 6- segmented, first segment with blunt process on outer margin, second segment with large, posteriorly directed hook along outer margin, aesthetasc on fourth and sixth segments. Antennary exopod one-segmented, carrying four subequal pinnate setae. Exopod P1 one-segmented; endopod P2 represented by one seta and exopod fused to basis carrying one naked seta and one strong bipinnate spiniform seta; endopod P3 and P4 represented by small tubercle carrying one short seta; exopod P3 one-segmented and exopod P4 two-segmented; P5 distinct, with three setae on exopod, basis with one seta on outer peduncle, endopodal lobe with two setae, exopod with three setae.</p><p>Male. No sexual dimorphism in P1, P3, P4; sexual dimorphism: antennule seven-segmented, aesthetasc on fifth and seventh segments; exopod P2 vestigial, with one apical strong spiniform seta and two inner sparsely plumose setae; P5 fused, with three long setae on the exopod and very reduced naked endopodal lobe; P6 vestigial, asymmetrical, right P6 with reduced, non-functional plate, left P6 with large internal plate articulated with the somite, each P6 with a process carrying two setae.</p><p>Type and only species. Fiersiphontina sensillata (Wells &amp; Rao, 1987) (= Laophontina sensillata Wells &amp; Rao, 1987: pp. 184–186, figs 149–150), here designated. The diagnosis of the genus coincides with that of the only known and type species of the genus, and must, therefore, be considered provisional.</p><p>Etymology. The generic name is dedicated to Dr. Frank Fiers, Royal Belgian Institute of Natural Sciences, Brussels, Belgium, for his important contribution to the knowledge of Laophontidae . The generic name is a combination of his name and the suffix – phontina commonly used in genus type names of this family. Gender feminine.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DD6331FF89FF97259E91466292FF79	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Bruno, Maria Cristina;Cottarelli, Vezio	Bruno, Maria Cristina, Cottarelli, Vezio (2011): Proposal of Fiersiphontina gen. nov., redescription of Fiersiphontina sensillata comb. nov., and new data on the distribution of Spiniferaphonte (Copepoda, Harpacticoida, Laophontidae). Zootaxa 2809: 1-19, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.277103
03DD6331FF8AFF99259E95386676FCB9.text	03DD6331FF8AFF99259E95386676FCB9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Fiersiphontina sensillata (Wells & Rao 1987) Wells & Rao 1987	<div><p>Fiersiphontina sensillata (Wells &amp; Rao, 1987) comb. nov.</p><p>(Figs 1–7)</p><p>Synonymy. Laophontina sensillata n. sp. — Wells &amp; Rao, 1987: pp. 184–186, figs 149–150. Laophontina sensillata Wells &amp; Rao—Mielke, 1997: pp. 227–228, fig. 4; Wells, 2007; pp. 62, 433, 456. Laophonte sensillata Mielke, 1997: p 228.</p><p>Material examined. Ten females (NHMUK 2011.696, 2011.697, 2011.698, DSAUT 101-107), eleven males (NHMUK 2011.699, 2011.700, DSAUT 108-116), one C3 (DSAUT 117) and one C4 copepodid (DSAUT 118), each mounted on one slide, from the interstitial habitat of a coral sandy beach near Sabang Village, Eastern Mindoro Province, Philippines, 13° 31’ 17” N; 120° 58’ 23” E, 20 March 1998.</p><p>One male (NHMUK 2011.701) mounted on slide, from the interstitial habitat of a coral sandy beach on the southern shore of North Pandan Island, Western Mindoro Province, Philippines, 12° 51’ 24” N; 120° 45’ 12” E, 26 January 2006.</p><p>Two males (NHMUK 2011.702, DSAUT 119) each mounted on one slide, from the interstitial habitat of a coral sandy beach in Sumilon Island, Visayas Archipelago, Philippines, 13° 33’ 22” N; 121° 03’ 23” E, 13 January 1985.</p><p>One male (DSAUT 120) and two C4 copepodids (DSAUT 121, 122), each mounted on one slide, from the interstitial habitat of a coral sandy beach in Verde Island, Batangas Province, Philippines, 9° 251’ 45” N; 123° 23’ 35” E, 14 February 2004.</p><p>Two males (NHMUK 2011.703, DSAUT 123) and one female (NHMUK 2011.704), each mounted on one slide, from the interstitial habitat of a coral sandy beach in Salag Do-Ong beach, Visayas Archipelago, Siquijor Island, Philippines, 9° 12’ 47” N; 123° 40’ 59” E, 5 April 1998.</p><p>One C 5 female copepodid (DSAUT 124), mounted on one slide, from the interstitial habitat of a coral sandy beach in Gaspar Island, Marinduque Island, Philippines, 13° 15’ 13” N; 121° 52’ 03” E, 24 August 1992.</p><p>One C 5 male copepodid (DSAUT 125), mounted on one slide, from the interstitial habitat of a coral sandy beach south of Nouméa, New Caledonia, 22° 18’ 2” N; 166° 26’ 17” E, 20 October 1982.</p><p>All material collected by V. Cottarelli.</p><p>Description of female. Total body length, measured from anterior margin of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami = 405–480 μm (n = 9; mean = 437 μm). Largest width measured at posterior margin of cephalothorax: 92 µm. Body distinctly cylindrical, habitus as in Fig. 1 A. Cephalothorax with parallel margins. Free prosomites as wide as cephalothorax. Urosome slightly tapering posteriorly. Second and third urosomites fused only ventrally to form genital double-somite. Integument of cephalothorax densely pitted in the median and anterolateral areas but with symmetrical pattern of smooth areas; in the anterodistal areas pits less dense and progressively substituted by striae intersecting and creating irregular polygons (Fig. 2 A). Distal margin of cephalothorax with one band of short, straight setules (Fig. 2 A). Cephalothorax with 31 sensilla, and eight sensilla along distal margin, slightly expanded into several lobes. Distodorsal margins of free somites (Fig. 2 B) (except penultimate urosomite) carrying the following number of small sensilla: first and second prosomites: ten sensilla; third prosomite and first urosomite: eight sensilla; genital double-somite and following urosomite: six sensilla. One pair of sensilla flanking each pair of swimming legs, and one pair of sensilla on distoventral margin of genital double-somite (Figs 1 A, 2C). All somites densely hairy on dorsal (Fig. 2 B) and ventral surface (Fig. 1 A), the latter with less dense hairs; free prosomites and first urosomite hairy also on lateral surface (Fig. 1 A). Dorsal and lateral distal margin of cephalothorax smooth, those of free prosomites and following four urosomites serrate, serration and sensilla present also along the separated portions of genital double-somite. Genital double-somite subdivided dorsally and laterally, ventral suture marked by chitin patches (Fig. 2 C), row of spinules only along the midventral distal margin, between the two medialmost sensilla (Fig. 2 C). Fourth and fifth urosomites with row of spinules along the ventral distal margin (Fig. 1 A). Genital field with one thin seta on each vestigial P6 and circular copulatory pore forming posterior margin of an elongated receptaculus seminis, and opening posteriorly to transversal ridge (Fig. 2 C). Anal somite with four ventral pores; lateral distal margin from end of operculum to insertion of caudal ramus projecting and serrate (Fig. 2 D). Anal operculum (Figs 2 D, 2E) distinctly posteriorly produced, semilunar, flanked by two sensilla, and with strongly incised margin forming ten large, tooth-like processes; a characteristic tuft of long hairlike setules increasing in length towards middle present below operculum.</p><p>Caudal rami (Figs 2 D, 2E): conical, shorter than anal somite, slightly wider than long (length measured to insertion of seta V, width measured at ramus insertion); ventral and outer sides hairy. Seven hook-like processes: three anterior to seta VII (the largest one flanking seta VII) (1–3, Figs 2 D, 2E), one small process anterior to seta I (4, Figs 2 D, 2E), one larger process on distal outer distal corner (5, Figs 2 D, 2E), two ventral distal processes (6, 7, Figs 1 A, 2E). Seven setae inserted distally; seta I, II, and III of different lengths: seta III smallest, seta II longest; seta IV plumose; seta V robust, dorsally bent, strongly sclerotised; seta VI short and slender; seta VII as long as seta IV, naked.</p><p>Rostrum (Fig. 2 F): large and prominent, broadly triangular, not fused to cephalothorax, with pair of sensilla anteriorly, dorsal surface pitted.</p><p>Antennule (Fig. 2 G): six-segmented; first and second segments wider than following ones; first segment with blunt process on outer margin and longitudinal spinule row along inner margin; second segment with large, posteriorly directed hook along outer margin; fourth segment with distal tubercle carrying very long aesthetasc and two setae of same length; sixth segment with acrothek carrying one short aethetasc and one seta. All setae naked; armature formula: 1-[1], 2-[9], 3-[6], 4-[2 + ae], 5-[1], 6-[8 + acrothek].</p><p>Antenna (Fig. 3 A): coxa bare; allobasis with pinnate abexopodal seta inserted in distal third. Exopod one-segmented and small, carrying four subequal bipinnate setae. Endopod with two subapical spinules along outer margin; two bipinnate subapical inner spines; apically from inner to outer: one plain spine, one bipinnate spine, one unipinnate spine, three geniculate spines.</p><p>Mandible (Fig. 3 B): with well-developed, strongly sclerotised gnathobase carrying four blunt teeth and one bipinnate seta. Palp uniramous, with three long setae and a short one (vestige of endopod?).</p><p>Maxillule (Fig. 3 C): praecoxal arthrite well developed; with transverse row of long spinules on posterior surface; distal margin with four setae of same length and a shorter one, and four strong, curved and unidenticulate spines. Coxal endite with two naked setae of same length. Basal endite with four naked setae, two of which geniculate. Endopod small, partially fused to basis, with three apical and one subapical naked setae; exopod one-segmented, completely fused to basis, with two apical setae.</p><p>Maxilla (Fig. 3 D): syncoxa with row of long spinules along outer margin, increasing in length towards the middle of row, transverse rows of short spinules on posterior surface, and row of short spinules along inner margin. Two endites, each with one strong unipinnate spine and two slender and long setae. Allobasis drawn out into strong, slightly curved, armed claw carrying two setae. Endopod very reduced, fused to allobasis, carrying two naked setae of same length.</p><p>Maxilliped (Fig. 3 E): syncoxa elongate with short outer subdistal naked seta. Basis long and slender, slightly enlarged in middle part, naked. Endopod drawn out into long unipinnate claw, as long as basis, with short accessory seta anteriorly.</p><p>P1-P4: intercoxal sclerite separated from coxa.</p><p>P1 (Fig. 3 F): coxa cylindrical with row of long spinules along inner margin and two setae at about 2/3 of same margin. Basis slightly shorter than coxa, with one short distal seta and hair-like setules along inner and outer margins. Exopod one-segmented, hair-like spinules on inner margin, three subequal naked setae along outer margin, one seta on outer distal corner, one normal and one geniculate apical setae of different length. Endopod two-segmented, first segment very long and 3.8 times as long as second segment, bare; second segment apically with armed claw, one minute, naked accessory seta and one smaller spine.</p><p>P2 (Fig. 3 G): coxa bare, slightly longer than wide. Basis with outer tubercle carrying seta; exopod fused to basis, represented by lobe carrying one inner sparsely plumose seta and one apical strong spiniform bipinnate spine. Endopod represented by one sparsely plumose seta.</p><p>P3 (Fig. 4 A): coxa and basis completely fused, outer basipodal tubercle carrying one seta. Exopod one-segmented, with one sparsely plumose seta on distal inner corner, one sparsely plumose seta and two strong bipinnate spines apically. Endopod fused to coxobasis represented by one tubercle carrying one sparsely plumose seta.</p><p>P4 (Fig. 4 B): coxa and basis completely fused, outer basipodal tubercle carrying one seta. Exopod two-segmented, first segment with one strong, long, bipinnate spine on outer distal corner; second segment with two sparsely plumose setae on distal inner corner, one sparsely plumose seta and one strong bipinnate spine apically. Endopod fused to coxobasis represented by tubercle carrying one naked seta.</p><p>P5 (Fig. 4 C): baseoendopod separate from exopod, with spinules along inner margin and outer basal seta arising from long peduncle. Endopodal lobe carrying two pinnate setae. Exopod rectangular, longer than wide, with spinules along outer and inner margins, carrying three apical pinnate setae, innermost seta longest.</p><p>Description of male. Total body length, measured from anterior margin of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami = 402–467 μm (n = 10; mean = 429 μm). Largest width measured at posterior margin of cephalothorax: 74 µm. Habitus (Fig. 1 B) similar to female, but proportionally thinner, with fully separated second and third urosomites. Body surface ornamentation as in female, second urosomite ornamented as first one. Caudal rami similar to those of female in shape and ornamentation, seta I longer (both absolutely and relative to setae II–III), seta II shorter (about as long as seta III), seta V proportionally longer and thinner (Fig. 4 D) than in female (Fig 1 B). Anal operculum (Fig. 4 D), similar to that of female but with 11 tooth-like processes.</p><p>A2, mouth parts, P1, P3, P4 (Figs 4 F, 4G) similar to those of female except small differences in the length of some setae and spines. Spermatophore as in Fig. 5 A.</p><p>Antennule (Figs 5 D, 5E): seven-segmented; sub-chirocer. First segment as in female but with additional distal row of spinules; setules along outer margin longer, less numerous and with more restricted distribution than in female. Second segment as in female but with transformed seta (asterisked in figure); fifth segment strongly enlarged with distal tubercle carrying very long aesthetasc and two setae of same length, and seven setae, one of which (ventral) is unipinnate; seventh segment with acrothek carrying one thin and long aethetasc, and one seta. Armature formula: 1-[1], 2-[9], 3-[6], 4-[2], 5-[9 + ae], 6-[0], 7-[8+ ae].</p><p>P2 (Fig. 4 E): similar to that of female but vestigial exopod carrying one additional inner sparsely plumose seta.</p><p>P5 (Fig. 5 B): baseoendopods fused, very reduced naked endopodal lobe: exopod with three subequal pinnate setae.</p><p>P6 (Figs 1 B, 5C): vestigial, asymmetrical, right P6 with reduced, non-functional plate, left P6 with large internal plate articulated with the somite, each P6 with a process carrying two setae of different thickness.</p><p>Description of third copepodid (C3). Seven somites, habitus as in fig. 6A; length, measured from anterior margin of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami, 305 µm. Distal margin of cephalotorax smooth, distal margin of all somites and of anal operculum denticulate as in the adult. Anal operculum (Fig. 6 B) with some denticles (not present in the adult) transversely aligned dorso-laterally near sensilla.</p><p>Caudal rami (Fig. 6 B): seta V transformed and fused with the caudal ramus, dorsal process not completely developed. Armature incomplete: two lateral setae (setae I and II) missing.</p><p>Antennule four-segmented; first segment similar to that of adult, second segment with a small posteriorly directed hook.</p><p>P1 (Fig. 6 C): similar to that of adults, all exopodal setae not geniculate.</p><p>P2 (Fig. 6 D): protopodite still fused to somite; exopod represented by one lobe fused with the protopodite and carrying three setae, one of which enlarged and spiniform. Endopod represented by one seta.</p><p>P3 (fig. 6E): protopodite still fused to somite; exopod represented by one lobe fused with the protopodite and carrying two normal setae and one laminate seta with finely extruded apex; endopod represented by one tubercle with one seta.</p><p>P4 (Fig. 6 F): protopod still fused to somite; exopod represented by one lobe fused with the protopodite and carrying four setae, one enlarged and spiniform; endopod represented by one tubercle with one seta.</p><p>P5 (fig. 6G): two small adjacent tubercles, each with one seta.</p><p>P6 (Fig. 6 H): one small bare lobe.</p><p>Description of fourth copepodid (C4). Eight somites; habitus and ornamentation of cephalotorax and somites as in C3. Total body length, measured from anterior margin of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami = 355 μm.</p><p>Anal somite (Fig. 6 I): dorsolateral row of denticles more marked. Anal operculum (Fig. 6 I): distal denticles ornamentation almost identical to that of the adult; the characteristic tuft of long hair-like setules increasing in length towards the middle is already present below the operculum.</p><p>Caudal rami (Fig. 6 I): seta IV and V as in the adult, ramus quadrangular in lateral view (not yet conical as it is in the adult) with a strong dorsal hook-like process anteriorly to seta VII, which is strongly similar to that of the copepodid and adult of Spiniferaphonte (see Fiers 1991 and Gheerardyn et al. 2007).</p><p>Antennule (Fig. 6 J): four-segmented; first and second segment very similar to those of adult; projection of second segment larger and more pointed than in adult.</p><p>P2 (Fig. 6 K): protopodite still fused to somite; exopod represented by one lobe fused with the protopodite and carrying two setae, one enlarged and spiniform. Endopod represented by one tubercle with one small seta.</p><p>P3 (fig. 6L): protopodite still fused to somite; exopod represented by one lobe fused with the protopodite and carrying yhree setae, two enlarged and spiniform. Endopod represented by one tubercle with one small seta.</p><p>P4 (Fig. 6 M): exopod one-segmented with five setae (same number as those present in the two-segmented exopod of the adult), three enlarged and spiniform. Endopod represented by one seta.</p><p>P5 (fig. 6N): distinct expodal lobe with three setae. Endopodal lobe not recognizable.</p><p>P6 (fig. 6O): two small lobes, each one with one seta.</p><p>Decription of female fifth copepodid (C5). Nine somites, total body length, measured from anterior margin of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami = 450 μm. Anal somite (Fig. 7 A): with dorso-lateral row of denticles. Anal operculum (Fig. 7 A): distal denticles ornamentation almost identical to those of adult. Caudal rami (Fig. 7 A): almost completely developed: each carrying six normal and one transformed setae, two dorsal hook-like processes anterior to seta VII still inserted on large protrusion (see figure in lateral view for male C5 as described below). Hooks and protrusion shrunk in the adult to form conical shape of ramus.</p><p>A1 as in Fig. 7 C.</p><p>P1 (Fig. 7 D): with one seta at midlength of the inner margin of basis, apical seta of exopod geniculate.</p><p>P2-P4 (Figs 7 E, 7F, 7G): as in C4, but proportionally larger.</p><p>P5 (Fig 7 H): exopodal lobe with three setae, endopodal lobe with two small setae.</p><p>P6 (Fig. 7 I): two adjacent lobes, each one with one seta.</p><p>Description of male fifth copepodid (C5). Nine somites, total body length, measured from anterior margin of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami = 419 μm. Anal somite (Fig. 7 B), anal operculum (Fig. 7 B), A1, A2, mouth parts, P1-P4 and P6 as in the female C5. Caudal rami (Fig. 7 B) sexually dimorphic: transformed seta V is longer than in female C5.</p><p>P5 (Fig. 7 J): setae on the exopodal lobe shorter than those of female C5, baseoendopodal lobe bare.</p><p>Variability. In adult specimens, the number of tooth-like processes on the anal operculum ranges from 9 to 12 in females, and from 9 to 14 in males. In one male paratype from Siqujior the second segment of exp-P4 is longer than wide (Fig. 5 F).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DD6331FF8AFF99259E95386676FCB9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Bruno, Maria Cristina;Cottarelli, Vezio	Bruno, Maria Cristina, Cottarelli, Vezio (2011): Proposal of Fiersiphontina gen. nov., redescription of Fiersiphontina sensillata comb. nov., and new data on the distribution of Spiniferaphonte (Copepoda, Harpacticoida, Laophontidae). Zootaxa 2809: 1-19, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.277103
03DD6331FF84FF99259E97F86367F854.text	03DD6331FF84FF99259E97F86367F854.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Spiniferaphonte ornata Gheerardyn & Fiers 2007	<div><p>Spiniferaphonte cf. ornata Gheerardyn &amp; Fiers, 2007</p><p>(Fig. 8)</p><p>Material examined. One female (DSAUT 126) mounted on one slide, from washout of coral sand and fragments, hand-collected by snorkeling at 5 m depth, in front of beach near Sabang Village where Fiersiphontina sensillata comb. nov. was collected, Eastern Mindoro Province, Philippines, 13° 31’ 17” N; 120° 58’ 23” E, 20 March 1998. Material collected by V. Cottarelli.</p><p>Description of female. Total body length, measured from anterior margin of rostrum to posterior margin of caudal rami = 711 μm. Habitus, body ornamentation, rostrum A1 (Fig. 8 A), A2, mouth parts, P1, as in S. ornata .</p><p>Anal operculum: with 11 tooth-like processes (Fig. 8 B).</p><p>Caudal rami (Fig. 8 B): armature as in S. ornata but seta V proportionally longer and thinner, one tubepore adjacent to seta VI (arrowed in figure).</p><p>P2 (Fig. 8 C): exopod one-segmented narrowing at tip, with three apical plumose setae, two innermost shorter and of same length; one strong bipinnate spine on outer distal corner.</p><p>P3 (Fig. 8 D): basis with one pore; exopod three-segmented, first and second segments with one very strong bipinnate spine on outer distal corner; third segment with three apical and one inner pinnate setae of subequal length, inner seta inserted at midlength of segment.</p><p>P4 (Fig. 8 E): exopod three-segmented, first segment with very strong bipinnate spine on outer distal corner; second segment with long bipinnate spiniform seta on outer distal corner; third segment with four pinnate setae of different length.</p><p>P5 (Fig. 8 F): exopod shorther than in S. ornata, with similar armature but three subequal distal pinnate setae and one longer and pinnate subapical outer seta. Endopodal lobe with four setae as in S. ornata, but less developed.</p><p>Remarks. Only the characters which distinguish this specimen from the original description are given above. Spiniferaphonte cf. ornata differs in body length (711 µm vs 564–610 µm); the morphology and armature of P2-P5 and anal operculum (stronger spines on the P2-P4 exopods, one additional seta on 3-exp P3, a much longer P4 endopod, and an anal operculum with more processes on the distal margin in Spiniferaphonte cf. ornata). The caudal rami and P5 have additional differences in setal/spinal length (the caudal rami have an additional secretory tube pore, not recorded in Spiniferaphonte ornata). These differences might be large enough to attribute Spiniferaphonte cf. ornata to a new species, but the availability of only one specimen does not allow us to evaluate the possible intraspecific variability, or to describe the male morphology. As a consequence, we postpone a more precise definition of the taxonomic status of this specimen until we are able to collect more material.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03DD6331FF84FF99259E97F86367F854	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Bruno, Maria Cristina;Cottarelli, Vezio	Bruno, Maria Cristina, Cottarelli, Vezio (2011): Proposal of Fiersiphontina gen. nov., redescription of Fiersiphontina sensillata comb. nov., and new data on the distribution of Spiniferaphonte (Copepoda, Harpacticoida, Laophontidae). Zootaxa 2809: 1-19, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.277103
