Progress in the discovery of amphipod crustaceans
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Arfianti, T., Wilson, S. & Costello, M.J. Progress in the discovery of amphipod crustaceans, PeerJ, 7, 2018Download Item:
Abstract:
At present, amphipod crustaceans comprise 9,980 species, 1,664 genera, 444 subfamilies, and 221 families. Of these, 1,940 species (almost 20%) have been discovered within
the last decade, including 18 fossil records for amphipods, which mostly occurred in
Miocene amber and are probably all freshwater species. There have been more authors
describing species since the 1950s and fewer species described per author since the 1860s,
implying greater taxonomic effort and that it might be harder to find new amphipod
species, respectively. There was no evidence of any change in papers per author or
publication life-times of taxonomists over time that might have biased apparent effort.
Using a nonhomogeneous renewal process model, we predicted that by the year 2100,
5,600 to 6,600 new amphipod species will be discovered. This indicates that about twothirds of amphipods remain to be discovered which is twice the proportion than for
species overall. Amphipods thus rank amongst the least well described taxa. To increase
the prospect of discovering new amphipod species, studying undersampled areas and
benthic microhabitats are recommended.
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http://people.tcd.ie/swilsonDescription:
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PeerJ;2018;
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Amphipoda, Crustacea, Taxonomy, BiodiversityDOI:
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.5187Metadata
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