A History of Crustacea: Recent MalacostracaD. Appleton, 1893 - 466 pagini |
Din interiorul cărții
Rezultatele 1 - 5 din 82
Pagina vii
... should be taken for granted . The other materials which he had collected for his purposed work , relating principally to the characters of the living organism , are still in reserve for the service of a future volume . In the.
... should be taken for granted . The other materials which he had collected for his purposed work , relating principally to the characters of the living organism , are still in reserve for the service of a future volume . In the.
Pagina 14
... taken by Mr. Whymper at a height of 13,300 feet on the Great Andes of the Equator . In many parts of the world there are land - crabs , but none of these live in the British Isles . This is referred to as follows in the Narrative of the ...
... taken by Mr. Whymper at a height of 13,300 feet on the Great Andes of the Equator . In many parts of the world there are land - crabs , but none of these live in the British Isles . This is referred to as follows in the Narrative of the ...
Pagina 16
... taken , indepen- dently of the lowness of the tide , roaming among the coarser weeds , and mimicking in various ways the colours around them . The rocks which look least interesting , having no vegetation except the short black ...
... taken , indepen- dently of the lowness of the tide , roaming among the coarser weeds , and mimicking in various ways the colours around them . The rocks which look least interesting , having no vegetation except the short black ...
Pagina 17
... taken posses- sion of by two or three very distinct crustaceans , the two constant companions being the strange amphipod Chelura terebrans , with a name signifying the boring claw - tail , and a perhaps equally mischievous isopod ...
... taken posses- sion of by two or three very distinct crustaceans , the two constant companions being the strange amphipod Chelura terebrans , with a name signifying the boring claw - tail , and a perhaps equally mischievous isopod ...
Pagina 18
... taken so low down as 1,875 fathoms . Mr. Miers , who named it Ethusa ( Ethusina ) challengeri , says : " This is the greatest depth at which any Brachyurous crustacean was taken by the expedition , and also , I believe , the greatest ...
... taken so low down as 1,875 fathoms . Mr. Miers , who named it Ethusa ( Ethusina ) challengeri , says : " This is the greatest depth at which any Brachyurous crustacean was taken by the expedition , and also , I believe , the greatest ...
Alte ediții - Afișează-le pe toate
Termeni și expresii frecvente
adult Amphipoda animal Anomura apex appendages basal joint Beddard belong Brachyura branchiæ branchial branchial cavity Budde-Lund burrow carapace character chelate chelipeds claws crab Crustacea Cumacea Dana depth described developed distinct distinguished dorsal epipod exopod eye-stalks eyes Fabricius fathoms female fifth joint fifth pair flagella flagellum fourth joint Fritz Müller front genera genus Giard and Bonnier gnathopods Haan Herbst inch inner branch Isopoda Kröyer larvæ larval last pair Latreille Leach limbs Linn Macrura Malacostraca male mandibles margin maxillæ Mediterranean Miers Milne-Edwards Mysis narrow outer branch pair of legs pair of trunk-legs pairs of pleopods palp parasitic peduncle peræon peræopods plates pleon pleopods regions Risso rostrum rudimentary S. I. Smith Sars second antennæ second joint second maxillipeds setæ short side sixth segment slender specimens Spence Bate spines Stimpson sub-order telson terminal joint third maxillipeds three pairs three-jointed tribe trunk two-jointed type species uropods ventral
Pasaje populare
Pagina 157 - I think this is as curious a case of instinct as ever I heard of, and likewise of adaptation in structure between two objects apparently so remote from each other in the scheme of nature, as a crab and a cocoa-nut tree.
Pagina i - Jelly-Fish, Star-Fish, and Sea-Urchins. Being a Research on Primitive Nervous Systems. By GJ Romanes.
Pagina i - WARNER, MD, Assistant Physician, and Lecturer on Botany to the London Hospital, etc. With 51 Illustrations. $1.75. 52. ANTHROPOID APES. By ROBERT HARTMANN, Professor in the University of Berlin. With 63 Illustrations. $1.75. New York : D. APPLETON & CO., 1, 3, & 5 Bon/l Street.