Gmelinoides fasciatus
siperiankatka·(Stebbing, 1899)
GBIF:157132014
PROFILE
Species Profile
Habitat
Export occurrence data
Darwin Core Archive (ZIP)
GEOGRAPHY
Distribution Map
REGIONS
Geographic Distribution(2)
DATA
Occurrence Datasets
Common names used for this species across different languages and regions.
Vernacular (common) names are the everyday names used for a species in different languages and regions. A single species may have dozens of common names worldwide.
CLASSIFICATION
Taxonomic Classification Tree
IDENTIFIERS
External Identifiers(1)
To GenBank (207 nucleotides; 129 proteins)
NCBI:txid686704
Occurrences with images
CITATIONS
References(8)
Bazikalova, A.Y. (1945). Amfipody ozera Baikala [Amphipods of Lake Baikal]. <em>Trudy Baikalskoi Limnologicheskoi Stantsii, Akademiya Nauk SSSR.</em> 11: 1-440.
Berezina, N. A.; Panov, V. E. (2004). Distribution, population structure and salinity tolerance of the invasive amphipod Gmelinoides fasciatus (Stebbing) in the Neva Estuary (Gulf of Finland, Baltic Sea). <em>Hydrobiologia.</em> 514: 199-206.
Georgieva, A. P. . Sidorova, A. I, Shustov. Yu. A., Lesonen, M. A. (2021). The Baikal Amphipod Gmelinoides fasciatus (Amphipoda, Crustacea) in the Diet of Perch in the Littoral Zone of Lake Onega (Age and Seasonal Characteristics). <em>Biology Bulletin.</em> Vol. 48, Suppl. 1, pp. S24–S32.
Kamaltynov R.M. (2009). Vysshie rakoobraznye (Amphipoda: Gammaroidea) Angary i Eniseya. In: Timoshkin, O.A. (ed.) Annotirovannyi spisok fauny ozera Baikal i ego vodosbornogo basseina. Tom II: Vodoemy i vodotoki yuga Vostochnoi Sibiri i Severnoi Mongolii. Kniga 1. [Index of animal species inhabiting Lake Baikal and its catchment area. Vol. II: Basins and channels in the south of East Siberia and North Mongolia. Book 1]. Nauka, Novosibirsk, pp. 297−329.
Kamaltynov, R.M. (2001). Amfipody (Amphipoda: Gammaroidea). In: Timoshkin, O.A. (ed.) Annotirovannyi spisok fauny ozera Baikal i ego vodosbornogo basseina. Tom I: Ozero Baikal. Kniga 1 [Index of animal species inhabiting Lake Baikal and its catchment area. Vol. I: Lake Baikal. Book 1]. <em>Nauka, Novosibirsk.</em> pp. 572-831.