AnimaliaacceptedgenusAccepted
Chrysopetalum

Chrysopetalum

Ehlers, 1864

GBIF:119607779

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(1)

DISTRIBUTION: NA, CA, SA. LITERATURE RECORDS: Stossich 1883; Carus 1884; Graeffe 1905; Zavodnik 1967 b; Banse 1970; Amoureux & Katzmann 1971; Katzmann 1971, 1972; Amoureux 1975; Velimirov & Sint 1975; Amoureux 1983 c; Požar-Domac 1986; Špan et al. 1989; Požar-Domac 1994; Zavodnik & Kovačić 2000; Fraschetti et al. 2002; Giangrande et al. 2003, 2004; Casellato & Stefanon 2008; Castelli et al. 2008. NEW RECORDS: BM 2, BM 4, BM 5, BM 6, BM 7, BM 8, BM 9, BM 18, BM 71, BM 74. OTHER REPORTED NAMES: Chrysopetalum fragile Ehlers 1864.
Mikac, Barbara (2015): A sea of worms: polychaete checklist of the Adriatic Sea. Zootaxa 3943 (1): 1-172, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3943.1.1

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CLASSIFICATION

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Source Information

A sea of worms: polychaete checklist of the Adriatic Sea

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Mikac, Barbara (2015): A sea of worms: polychaete checklist of the Adriatic Sea. Zootaxa 3943 (1): 1-172, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3943.1.1

Abstract

The checklist of polychaetes of the Adriatic Sea (Mediterranean) based on bibliographic sources published from 1840 to 2014, as well as on novel data, with 49 new records for the area, is herein presented. The Adriatic Sea polychaete fauna comprises at present of 764 species in 360 genera and 62 families. The richest family is the Syllidae, with 112 species (c.a. 15% of the all taxa). Eight families account for as much as 50% of the diversity (Syllidae, Serpulidae, Sabellidae, Phyllodocidae, Spionidae, Polynoidae, Terebellidae and Nereididae). Among the three Adriatic sectors (Northern, Central and Southern Adriatic), the Northern Adriatic is the richest one, whereas the composition of the most diverse families is very similar in all sectors. Data on endemisms (6), aliens (29) and valid species with the type locality in the Adriatic Sea (90) are also discussed. The list of all relevant papers citing each species in the Adriatic is included, allowing future detailed information retrievals for distinct purposes. Results suggest that the number of species will keep increasing in the future, as new surveys will be undertaken, so regular updates of the present list will be necessary.

Key words: Annelida, Polychaeta, check-list, inventory, Adriatic Sea, Mediterranean, biodiversity

Mikac B, plazi (2015). A sea of worms: polychaete checklist of the Adriatic Sea. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3943.1.1 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-14.

CC0Published 12/31/2015View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
119607779
Dataset Key
3d075c3e-1a51-4041-8163-fb0b796c7835
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2312808
Taxon ID
03DD87AFFFA3FFCE488D609E2805FBA0.taxon
Last Crawled
6/11/2026
Last Interpreted
6/11/2026