Figure 1.Acartia bispinosa female from the northern Red Sea. A habitus, dorsal view B habitus, lateral view C rostrum and proximal part of the antennule, lateral view D urosome, dorsal view E urosome, ventral view F urosome, later view right G urosome, lateral view left H–I antennule. All scale bars in mm.
Fabrício Lopes Carvalho, Célio Magalhães, Fernando Luis Mantelatto
Zookeys
Figure 5.Commonest shape of the antennular peduncle. Palaemon carteri (a MPEG 787), Palaemon ivonicus (b INPA 128) and Palaemon yuna sp. n. (c CCDB 4866).
Figure 1.CReefs collecting sites in the Lizard Island region with names of major collecting sites. A Lizard Island group and nearby islands and reefs B Lizard Island group. LIRS = Lizard Island Research Station.
Seong Yong Moon, Seok-Hyun Youn, B. A. Venmathi Maran
Zookeys
Figure 1.Stephos geojinensis sp. n., female paratype. A habitus, dorsal view B habitus, lateral view C urosome, dorsal view D urosome and genital double-somite, ventral view E antennule. Scale bars: A, B = 200 µm; C–E = 50 µm.
This is just a test. Please excuse the shaky camera.
I am testing a cheap USB microscope to film nocturnal critters under infrared light. The lighting is provided (for now) by an infrared flashlight on top of the aquarium. I've been testing several angles and definitely I need a snoot or something similar.
[taxonomy:kingdom=Animalia]
[taxonomy:phylum=Arthropoda]
[taxonomy:subphylum=Crustacea]
[taxonomy:class=Malacostraca]
[taxonomy:order=Tanaidacea]
[taxonomy:order=Amphipoda]
[taxonomy:class=Ostracoda]