Kinorhyncha name details
Habroderella Zelinka, 1907
731261 (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:731261)
unaccepted > junior subjective synonym (juvenile stage)
Genus
none (type not designated)
- Species Habroderella capitata Zelinka, 1928 accepted as Echinoderes capitatus (Zelinka, 1912) (juvenile stage)
- Species Habroderella ferox Zelinka, 1928 accepted as Echinoderes ferox (Zelinka, 1928) (juvenile stage)
- Species Habroderella hyalina Zelinka, 1928 accepted as Echinoderes hyalinus (Zelinka, 1928) (juvenile stage)
- Species Habroderella orientalis Kirsteuer, 1964 accepted as Echinoderes caribiensis Kirsteuer, 1964 (juvenile stage)
- Species Habroderella trispinosa Zelinka, 1928 accepted as Echinoderes trispinosus (Zelinka, 1928) (juvenile stage)
marine
feminine
Zelinka, C. (1907). Zur Kenntnis der Echinoderen. <em>Zoologischer Anzeiger.</em> 32(5): 130-136. [details] 
Etymology [The genus name was derived from Greek ἁβρός, habrós, gracefully, delicately, and from Greek deres, neck, a common...
Etymology [The genus name was derived from Greek ἁβρός, habrós, gracefully, delicately, and from Greek deres, neck, a common suffix of cyclorhyagid genera, and probably referred to the delicate size of the juvenile specimens in comparison with the adult stage. The suffix -derella represents the diminuitive of -deres and was applied to the eyeless juveniles of Echinoderes.] [details]
Neuhaus, B. (2025). World Kinorhyncha Database. Habroderella Zelinka, 1907. Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/kinorhyncha/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=731261 on 2025-05-10
Date
action
by
original description
Zelinka, C. (1907). Zur Kenntnis der Echinoderen. <em>Zoologischer Anzeiger.</em> 32(5): 130-136. [details] 
From editor or global species database
Etymology [The genus name was derived from Greek ἁβρός, habrós, gracefully, delicately, and from Greek deres, neck, a common suffix of cyclorhyagid genera, and probably referred to the delicate size of the juvenile specimens in comparison with the adult stage. The suffix -derella represents the diminuitive of -deres and was applied to the eyeless juveniles of Echinoderes.] [details]