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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: INTRODUCTION\nSince April 1972 an ecological trawl-survey programme has been undertaken by the Netherlands Institute for Sea Research (NIOZ), Texel, in the southern North Sea with the R. V. "Aurelia". The main object is to obtain information on distribution, density, biomass and fluctuations of crawling or swimming demersal (epibenthic) fauna such as small fishes, shrimps, prawns, crabs, asteroids, ophiuroids and some gastropods, for the evaluation of the role of these carnivores in the benthic ecosystem of the southern North Sea. Sedimentological aspects of the area are described by Creutzberg & Postma (1979). Within the context of the present paper the most important feature is the mesh of 5 x 5 mm2 of the cod end of the 51/2 m beam-trawl used and the extensive area of 5000-10,000 m2 covered during each haul. These exceptional circumstances resulted into faunistically interesting catches which gave rise to a cooperation with taxonomic specialists of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie (RMNH), Leiden.\nThe present paper deals with decapod crustaceans, collected during "Aurelia"-cruises, which are considered to be scarce or rare in the southern North Sea, completed with data from bottom-samples and other sources. The species in question are: Pandalina brevirostris, Spirontocaris lilljeborgii, Alpheus macrocheles, Pontophilus spinosus, Pontophilus bispinosus, Galathea dispersa, Ebalia tuberosa, Ebalia tumefacta, Ebalia cranchii, Atelecyclus rotundatus, Monodaeus couchii, Callianassa subterranea, Callianassa tyrrhena, Upogeb ia stellata and Upogebia deltaura.\nOf the genus Macropodia a number of specimens have been collected, which partly were identified as M. linaresi. Other specimens, however, represent one or two new species. On Macropodia in the southern North Sea a seperate paper will
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: INTRODUCTION\nPart XVI of the Fauna van Nederland, Isopoda & Tanaidacea (Holthuis, 1956), deals with 27 species of Isopoda occurring in salt and/or brackish water.\nAccording to Holthuis (1956) the occurrence in the Netherlands of two of these, Sphaeroma serratum (Fabricius, 1787) and Bopyrus squillarum Latreille, 1802, is very doubtful and will remain so, as the material on which the records were based is lost and no new records of these species have been published for the Netherlands.\nSince 1956 many new data were obtained for several of the remaining 25 species, while 12 species were found for the first time in Dutch waters or in the southern North Sea. The present paper deals with the more interesting finds.\nPart of the species mentioned here have been discussed earlier. A key for the Dutch species is given by Huwae (1977). Since the publication of the key, three species, Pseudione hyndmanni (Bate & Westwood, 1868), Ione thoracica (Montagu, 1808) and Astacilla longicornis (Sowerby, 1806), were added to the Dutch fauna list. Two species, Arcturella dilatata (G. O. Sars, 1882) and Liriopsis pygmaea (Rathke, 1843) have been included here, because so far they were not represented in the collection of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie, although, properly speaking, they were not collected in the "Dutch" part of the southern North Sea.\nMost of the records from the Dutch coast are based on material obtained by members of the "Strandwerkgemeenschap van de Koninklijke Nederlandse Natuurhistorische Vereniging, de Nederlandse Jeugdbond voor Natuurstudie en de Algemeen Christelijke Jeugdbond voor Natuurstudie en Natuurbescherming" (the Shore Study-group of the Royal Netherlands Natural History Society, the Netherlands and General Christian Junior Leagues for Nature Study);
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 3
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    Unknown
    In:  Zoologische Bijdragen vol. 28 no. 1, pp. 5-7
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: Until the appearance, in 1970, of the American crayfish Orconectes limosus (Rafinesque, 1817) in the Netherlands, only a single species of crayfish was known here: Astacus astacus (Linnaeus, 1758). Geelen (1978a, b) provided an extensive discussion on the distribution of the two species.\nOn 13.vi.1980 the Rijksinstituut voor Visserijonderzoek of IJmuiden (National Institution for fishery Research, RIVO) presented the RMNH a freshwater crayfish with a request for identification. The specimen was caught by a fisherman in a freshwaterpond (named IJ) near Spaarndam, NW of Haarlem, province of Noord-Holland. The pond has an open connection with the Noorzeekanaal, the mostly brackish canal that connects Amsterdam with the North Sea. The crayfish, a male with a carapace length of 49.8 mm (total length 103.6 mm) proved to belong to Astacus leptodactylus Eschscholz, 1823 (pl. 1).\nA month later a second specimen of the same species was caught with hook and line in the small port of Moerdijk, on the Hollands Diep, province of NoordBrabant, by Mr. A. van As of Roosendaal. This capture was reported upon in the daily newspaper Brabants Nieuwsblad of 18.vii.1980 in which also a photograph of the specimen was published. The specimen shown in the picture was definitely neither A. astacus nor O. limosus. Mr. van As, who kept the specimen alive in his aquarium, was kind enough to allow me to examine it, and there can be no doubt that it likewise belongs to A. leptodactylus.\nDr. J. F. M. Geelen, University of Nijmegen, confirmed (in litt., 12.viii.1980) that these were the first records of A. leptodactylus for the Netherlands; she had expected that it would appear here sooner or later.\nA. leptodactylus inhabits eastern Europe (Rumenia, Bulgaria, Yugoslavia, Czecho-Slovakia, East-Germany, Poland and Russia). In many countries, for
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-12
    Description: In this catalogue the type specimens of Decapod Crustacea in the collections of the Nationaal Natuurhistorisch Museum are listed in systematic order. Some lectotypes have been designated. The history of the collection is described. The first appendix lists all specimens in the dry collection collected before 1900. In the second appendix the pre-1900 sources of crustacean material in the collection are listed alphabetically; short biographies and portraits of collectors are given. An index to scientific names is added.
    Keywords: Crustacea ; Decapoda ; type-catalogue ; collectors.
    Repository Name: National Museum of Natural History, Netherlands
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