original description
Hartman, Olga. (1967). Polychaetous annelids collected by the USNS Eltanin and Staten Island cruises, chiefly from Antarctic Seas. <em>Allan Hancock Monographs in Marine Biology.</em> 2: 1-387.
page(s): 149 [details] Available for editors 
additional source
Clarke, Andrew; Johnston, Nadine M. (2003). Antarctic marine benthic diversity. <em>Oceanography and Marine Biology: an Annual Review.</em> 41: 47-114. (look up in IMIS) [details] Available for editors 
additional source
Neave, Sheffield Airey. (1939-1996). Nomenclator Zoologicus vol. 1-10 Online. <em>[Online Nomenclator Zoologicus at Checklistbank. Ubio link has gone].</em> , available online at https://www.checklistbank.org/dataset/126539/about [details]
source of synonymy
Capa, Maria; Parapar, Julio; Hutchings, Patricia. (2012). Phylogeny of Oweniidae (Polychaeta) based on morphological data and taxonomic revision of Australian fauna. <em>Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.</em> 166(2): 236-278., available online at https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1096-3642.2012.00850.x
page(s): 252 [details] Available for editors 
Present
Inaccurate
Introduced: alien
Containing type locality
From editor or global species database
Etymology Not stated. However, in the description of the genus Hartman mentions a short, globular prostomium. As Myrio means innumerable referring to the chaetae, the two words 'myrio' and 'globula' together do not create a meaningful genus name. Presumably Hartman retained 'myrio' to indicate similarity to the existing genus Myriochele. Indeed the two genera are now regarded as synonyms. [details]
Synonymy According to Capa et al (2012: 253) " Differences between Myriochele and Myrioglobula were traditionally based on the number of uniramous segments (Hartman, 1967), with Myrioglobula characterized by having one (TF = U : B : B) and Myriochele two or three (TF = U : U : B and U : U : U). However, this feature has been demonstrated not to be informative because it varies within Myriochele (two or three segments), and there are species, such as Myriochele robusta Parapar, 2003c, which show a different pattern with a biramous second segment between the uniramous first and third. " [details]