WoRMS source details

Taylor, John L. (1984). Family Nereidae Johnston, 1845. In: Uebelacker, J.M.; Johnson, P.G. (eds). Taxonomic guide to the polychaetes of the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Final report to the Minerals Management Service, contract 14-12-001-29091. Volume 5. Chapter Pagination: 31-1 to 31-42. Barry A. Vittor & Associates, Inc., Mobile, Alabama.
278393
Taylor, John L.
1984
Family Nereidae Johnston, 1845
In: Uebelacker, J.M.; Johnson, P.G. (eds). <i>Taxonomic guide to the polychaetes of the Northern Gulf of Mexico. Final report to the Minerals Management Service, contract 14-12-001-29091.</i> Volume 5. Chapter Pagination: 31-1 to 31-42. Barry A. Vittor & Associates, Inc., Mobile, Alabama.
Publication
World Polychaeta Database (WPolyDb). See Uebelacker & Johnson 1984 main entry for access
[None. Introduction starts as:]
Nereids are long, many-segmented, cylindrical worms that taper gradually toward the posterior end. Size varies considerably; mature worms may range in length from about 10 mm or less up to more than 200 mm. In most species, the head (prostomium and peristomium) has two anterior antennae, a pair of biarticulate anterolateral palps, four eyes, and four pairs of tentacular cirri posteriorly. The muscular pharynx is eversible and consists of an oral ring attached to the mouth, and a distal maxillary ring that bears a pair of jaws. By convention, each of these rings is subdivided along lines of tissue constriction into four dorsal and four ventral areas. These may be plain or variously equipped with soft papillae and/or chitinized paragnaths.
Gulf of Mexico
Systematics, Taxonomy
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Date
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2017-06-07 09:25:06Z
created

Neanthes micromma (Harper, 1979) (additional source)
Nereis (Neanthes) micromma Harper, 1979 accepted as Neanthes micromma (Harper, 1979) (new combination reference)
Nereis (Nereis) grayi Pettibone, 1956 accepted as Nereis grayi Pettibone, 1956 (new combination reference)
Nereis grayi Pettibone, 1956 (additional source)
 Depth range

Intertidal to about 160 m. [details]

 Distribution

Atlantic Ocean: Massachusetts to North Carolina (USA); northern Gulf of Mexico (Florida to Texas, USA). [details]

 Habitat

Fine sediments of sand, silt and clay, and in tubes of maldanids, from intertidal to shelf depths. [details]