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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; microslide; ; IZ number 98712; lot count 1; Microslide 01, balsam, whole mount; nauplius; other number E9.13;
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; microslide; ; Gray Museum; IZ number 73655; lot count 1; Microslide 01, cirri; original catalog number GM 5356;
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Summary[
edit] Description: English: 1, Conchoderma virgatum; 2, Conchoderma auritum; 3, 4, 5, Lepas anatifera; 6, Lepas fascicularis. For explanation of plate see page 119 U.S. National Museum Bulletin no. 60 Pl. IX Image from page 156 of "Bulletin - United States National Museum" (1877) Identifier: bulletinunitedst601907unit Title: Bulletin - United States National Museum Year: 1877 (1870s) Authors: United States National Museum Smithsonian Institution United States. Dept. of the Interior Subjects: Science Publisher: Washington : Smithsonian Institution Press, [etc.] for sale by the Supt. of Docs., U.S. Govt Print. Off. Contributing Library: Smithsonian Libraries Digitizing Sponsor: Smithsonian Libraries. Date: 1877. Source:
https://archive.org/stream/bulletinunitedst601907unit/bulletinunitedst601907unit#page/n156/mode/1up Image from page 156 of "Bulletin - United States National Museum" (1877). Author: United States National Museum Smithsonian Institution United States. Dept. of the Interior. Other versions:
: This file has been extracted from another file:
Conchoderma virgatum, Conchoderma auritum, Lepas anatifera, and Lepas fascicularis.jpg :
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Lepas anatifera
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Pitriana P, Valente L, von Rintelen T, Jones DS, Prabowo RE, von Rintelen K (2020) An annotated checklist and integrative biodiversity discovery of barnacles (Crustacea, Cirripedia) from the Moluccas, East Indonesia. ZooKeys 945: 17-83.
Wikimedia Commons
Figure 5; Lepas anserifera Linnaeus, 1767 (MZB Cru Cir 058-2) a side view showing the capitulum and peduncle b side view showing the carina c external view of scutum d internal view of scutum e external view of tergum and carina f internal view of tergum and carina g cirrus I h maxilla i maxillule j mandible k mandibular palp l labrum m close up view on the teeth of labrum n penis. Scale bars: 4 mm (a–b); 3 mm (c–f); 1 mm (g, n); 0.5 mm (h–m).
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Summary[
edit] Description: English: Lepas australis (Southern Goose Barnacle). These barnacles washed ashore in the Narrabeen Head Aquatic Reserve in Sydney, Australia. They were part of a group of hundreds attached to a floating log. We moved the log into some shallow water and the barnacles all woke up for a feed!. Date: 4 November 2011, 09:40:56. Source:
https://www.flickr.com/photos/johnwturnbull/6498242649/. Author: John Turnbull.
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Lepas aurita
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; microslide; ; IZ number 64064; lot count 1; Microslide 01, balsam, mouthparts; Microslide 02, balsam, left cirri 1; Microslide 02, balsam, left cirri 2; Microslide 02, balsam, right cirri 1; Microslide 02, balsam, right cirri 2; Microslide 03, balsam, left cirri 3; Mi; 1875-07-01T00:00:00Z
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Lepas diadema
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; microslide; ; Gray Museum; IZ number 73656; lot count 1; Microslide 01, mouthparts; original catalog number GM 5357;
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Pelagic Gooseneck Barnacle (Lepas anatifera) - 7 May 2020 - North Spit Beach, Coos County, Oregon
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Lepas vitrea
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Identifier: transformationso01dunc (
find matches)Title:
The transformations (or metamorphoses) of insects (Insecta, Myriapoda, Arachnida, and Crustacea) : being an adaptation, for English readers, of M. Émile Blanchard's "Metamorphoses, moeurs et instincts des insects;" and a compilation from the works of Newport, Charles Darwin, Spence Bate, Fritz Müller, Packard, Lubbock, Stainton, and othersYear:
1870 (
1870s)Authors:
Duncan, P. Martin (Peter Martin), 1821-1891 Blanchard, Emile, 1819-1900. Metamorphoses, moeurs et instincts des insects Conger, Paul S., former owner. DSI Abbott, Charles C., former owner. DSISubjects:
Insects Insects Myriapoda Arachnida CrustaceaPublisher:
Philadelphia : Claxton, Remsen, and HaffelfingerContributing Library:
Smithsonian LibrariesDigitizing Sponsor:
Smithsonian LibrariesView Book Page:
Book ViewerAbout This Book:
Catalog EntryView All Images:
All Images From Book Click here to
view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.Text Appearing Before Image:ey have been specially studied by Spence Bate, by thatmost accurate and philosophical observer, Charles Darwin, and byMartin St. Auge and other foreign naturalists. The engraving ofLcpas anatifera on the next page gives an idea of the shape of onegreat division of the Cirripedia—the stalked. This class is dividedinto pedunculated or stalked, and sessile or unstalkcd kinds ; thefirst are represented hanging on to pieces of wood, and the last maybe seen encrusting nearly every rock and piece of timber on mostparts of the sea-coast, and arc something like acorns in shape.Neither the pedunculated nor the sessile kinds ever move fromtheir fixed position, and the only evidence of life presented bythem to the ordinary observer is the occasional projection from theend of the shell of delicate fringed cirri, which thresh the waterin one direction. The cirri arc represented in the large engravinglike so many feathers projecting from the side of the shell of the 470 TRANSFORMATIONS OF INSECTS.Text Appearing After Image:I.cpas anatifera. THE CIRRIPEDIA. 471 Lcpas, and their absence may be remarked in many instances.They are enclosed within the cavity formed by the white lookingshell, which, however, in Nature is occasionally coloured with a blueand even purple tint. When a sessile barnacle is examined—andthey can readily be kept in the aquarium—the cirri will be seen toproject through a trap-door apparatus called the operculum, orlid of the shell. The shell is made up of five or more side piecesconnected together with strips of membrane, which are often bril-liantly coloured. The pieces or valves are composed of carbonateof lime ; but in some kinds of Cirripcdia they are formed, likeNote About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
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Identifier: cu31924089940419 (
find matches)Title:
The history of creation; or, The development of the earth and its inhabitants by the action of natural causes. A popular exposition of the doctrine of evolution in general, and of that of Darwin, Goethe, and Lamarck in particularYear:
1876 (
1870s)Authors:
Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Philipp August, 1834-1919 Lankester, E. Ray (Edwin Ray), Sir, 1847-1929 Haeckel, Ernst Heinrich Philipp August, 1834-1919. Natürliche schopfungsgeschichte EnglishSubjects:
Evolution Heredity Human beingsPublisher:
New York, D. Appleton and companyContributing Library:
Cornell University LibraryDigitizing Sponsor:
MSNView Book Page:
Book ViewerAbout This Book:
Catalog EntryView All Images:
All Images From Book Click here to
view book online to see this illustration in context in a browseable online version of this book.Text Appearing Before Image:ble series of facts in a very ablemanner. The common primary form of all Crabs, which in mostcases is even now the first to develop out of the egg, isoriginally one and the same, the so-called Nauplius Thisremarkable primsBval crab represents a very simple form ofarticulated animal, the body of which in general has theform of a roundish, oval, or pear-shaped disc, and has on itsventral side only three pairs of legs. The first of these isuncloven, the two subsequent pairs are forked. In front,above the mouth, lies a simple, single eye. Although thediflferent orders of the Crustacean class diflier very widelyfrom one another in the structure of their body and itsappendages, yet the early Nauplius form always remainsessentially the same. In order to be convinced of this, letthe reader look attentively at Plates X. and XL, a more de-tailed explanation of which is given in the Appendix OnPlate XI. we see the fully developed representatives of six FIX. JSazipUus-lSu^-form, of sir Crab-fish.Text Appearing After Image:Adxdtfbmn of-die same six Crab-rish. FLM.Note About Images Please note that these images are extracted from scanned page images that may have been digitally enhanced for readability - coloration and appearance of these illustrations may not perfectly resemble the original work.
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; microslide; ; IZ number 64064; lot count 1; Microslide 01, balsam, mouthparts; Microslide 02, balsam, left cirri 1; Microslide 02, balsam, left cirri 2; Microslide 02, balsam, right cirri 1; Microslide 02, balsam, right cirri 2; Microslide 03, balsam, left cirri 3; Mi; 1875-07-01T00:00:00Z
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Lepas anatifera
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Pelagic Gooseneck Barnacle (Lepas anatifera) - 7 May 2020 - North Spit Beach, Coos County, Oregon
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; 70% alc.; ; IZ number 35724; lot count 5; other number 260B; 2002-10-16T00:00:00Z
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Lepas spec.
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; 70% alc.; microslide; ; IZ number 34903; lot count 1; Microslide 01, balsam, trophi; Microslide 02, balsam, cirri 1; Microslide 02, balsam, cirri 2; Microslide 02, balsam, cirri 3; Microslide 02, balsam, cirri 4; Microslide 03, balsam, cirri 5; Microslide 03, balsam, cirri 6; o; 1882-07-08T00:00:00Z
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; ; ; microslide; ; Gray Museum; IZ number 73652; lot count 1; Microslide 01, cirri; original catalog number GM 5353; 1962-12-14T00:00:00Z