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Leuconia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Genus of sponges
For the town of ancient Ionia in Asia Minor, seeLeuconia (Ionia).

Leuconia
Scientific classificationEdit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Porifera
Class:Calcarea
Order:Baerida
Family:Baeriidae
Genus:Leuconia
Grant, 1833
Species

See text

Synonyms[1]
  • BaeriaMiklucho-Maclay, 1870

Leuconia is agenus ofcalcareous sponges in thefamilyBaeriidae. It was described by Englishanatomist andzoologistRobert Edmond Grant in 1833.[2]

Species

[edit]

The following species ofLeuconia are accepted in the World Porifera database:[1]

Several other species formerly treated as part ofLeuconia have been transferred to other genera, primarilyLeucandra.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abcVan Soest, R.W.M; Boury-Esnault, N.; Hooper, J.N.A.; Rützler, K.; de Voogd, N.J.; Alvarez, B.; Hajdu, E.; Pisera, A.B.; Manconi, R.; Schönberg, C.; Klautau, M.; Picton, B.; Kelly, M.; Vacelet, J.; Dohrmann, M.; Díaz, M.-C.; Cárdenas, P.; Carballo, J. L.; Ríos, P.; Downey, R. (2018)."Leuonia Grant, 1833".WoRMS.World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved2018-11-01.
  2. ^Grant, R. E. (1833). Lectures on Comparative Anatomy and Animal Physiology. Lecture IV. On the classification of the organs of animals, and on the organs of support in animalcules and poripherous animals.The Lancet, 1(531), 193–200.
  3. ^de Laubenfels, M. W. (1953). Sponges of the Alaskan Arctic.Smithsonian Miscellaneous Publications, 121(6), 1–22.
  4. ^Hozawa, S. (1929). Studies on the calcareous sponges of Japan.Journal of the Faculty of Science, Imperial University of Tokyo, Zoology, 1, 277–389.
  5. ^Dendy. A. (1892). Synopsis of the Australian Calcarea Heterocœla; with a proposed classification of the group and descriptions of some new genera and species.Proceedings of the Royal Society of Victoria, 5, 69–116.
  6. ^Carter, H. J. (1871). A description of two new Calcispongiæ, to which is added confirmation of Professor James-Clark's discovery of the true form of the sponge-cell (animal), and an account of the polype-like pore-area ofCliona corallinoides contrasted with Professor E. Häckel's view on the relationship of the sponges to the corals.The Annals and Magazine of Natural History, [4](8)43, 1–27.
  7. ^Topsent, M. E. (1907). Éponges calcaires recueillies par le Français dans l'Antarctique (Expédition du Dr. Charcot).Bulletin du Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, 13, 539–544.
  8. ^Grant, R. E. (1826)."Remarks on the structure of some calcareous sponges".Edinburgh New Philosophical Journal.1:166–170.
  9. ^Miklucho-Maclay, N. (1870). "Über eine schwämme des nördlichen stillen oceans und des eismeeres, welche im Zoologischen Museum der Kaiselichen Akademie der Wissenschaften in St. Petersburg augestellt sind. Ein beitrag zur morphologie und verbreitung der spongien".Mémoires de l'Académie Impériale des Sciences de St.-Pétersbourg.7 (15(3)):1–24.
  10. ^de Laubenfels, M. W. (1942). Porifera from Greenland and Baffinland collected by Captain Robert A. Bartlett.Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences, 32(9), 263–269.
Leuconia


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