identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03FE0E70FFA13275F1E4FB23FDFBFF5A.text	03FE0E70FFA13275F1E4FB23FDFBFF5A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Kyphocalanidae	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Family  Kyphocalanidae fam. nov. </p>
            <p>Diagnosis. Female. Small copepods with very short urosome. Cephalosome anteriorly strongly bent, more or less right-angled in lateral view. Rostrum present as two short, strong points lacking filaments. Antenna basis and endopod segment 1 without setae, inner lobe of segment 2 with 3-4 setae. Mandible endopod segment 1 without setae; exopod 5-segmented. Praecoxal endite of maxillule with 3 setae; proximal basal endite without setae; distal basal endite with 1 seta. Praecoxal endites and distal coxal endite of maxilla with 2 setae each; basal endite as 1 strong spine; endopod with 8 long and thick, worm-like sensory setae. Praecoxal lobes of maxilliped syncoxa with setal formula 1,2,0, all setae transformed into worm-like sensory setae. Swimming legs as typical of Clausocalanoidea: P1 endopod 1-segmented, P2 endopod 2-segmented, and P3–P4 endopods 3-segmented. P1–P4 exopods 3-segmented. P1 exopod segment 3 with 3 medial setae, P2–P4 exopod segment 3 with 4 medial setae. P5 present, uniramous.</p>
            <p> Type genus.  Kyphocalanus gen. nov.</p>
            <p> Remarks. The new family shares sensory setae on maxilla and maxilliped with a group of clausocalanoidean Bradfordian families including  Diaixidae ,  Parkiidae ,  Phaennidae ,  Rostrocalanidae ,  Scolecitrichidae and  Tharybidae . However,  Kyphocalanidae is unique among all Bradfordians in possessing the following apomorphies: i) praecoxal arthrite of maxillule with 3 setae (vs usually 9 setae or more in other Bradfordians); ii) maxilla proximal coxal endite with 2 setae (vs 3 setae in other Bradfordians); iii) maxilla distal basal endite plus endopod with 8 very long and thick worm-like sensory setae longer than all remaining sclerotized setae of maxilla (vs 3-6 worm-like sensory setae of moderate length present in other Bradfordians, except the male of  Kirnesius Markhaseva &amp; Semenova, 2005 (whose family placement in  Phaennidae is under review) bears 8 worm-like sensory setae of slender appearance shorter than sclerotized setae of maxilla); and iv) praecoxal lobes of maxilliped with a setal formula as 1,2,0 (vs 1,2,3; 1,2,2; 1,1,2; 1,2,1; 0,2,3; 0,2,2; 0,1,2; or 0,0,0 in other Bradfordians). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE0E70FFA13275F1E4FB23FDFBFF5A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Markhaseva, Elena L.;Schulz, Knud	Markhaseva, Elena L., Schulz, Knud (2009): A new family and genus of calanoid copepods (Crustacea) from the abyss of the Atlantic Ocean. Zootaxa 2304: 21-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.275327
03FE0E70FFA23274F1E4FE86FA28FE18.text	03FE0E70FFA23274F1E4FE86FA28FE18.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Kyphocalanus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Genus  Kyphocalanus gen. nov.</p>
            <p>Diagnosis. Female. Cephalon in lateral view strongly bent anteriorly. Rostrum as two short, prong-like points. Cephalosome and first pedigerous somite and pedigerous somites 4 and 5 separate. Urosome very short comparatively, of 4 somites, genital-double somite being the largest. Antennule shorter than prosome. Basis, endopod segment 1 and exopod segment 1 of antenna without setae; endopod segment 2 with 3 or 4 setae on inner lobe; exopod segment 2 with 1 short seta. Mandibular gnathobase long and slender, with narrow cutting edge; basis of mandible with 2 setae, proximal seta with conspicuous thickening at one-third length; endopod segment 1 without setae, segment 2 with 9 setae; exopod 5-segmented with 1, 1, 1, 1, and 1 setae. Praecoxal endite of maxillule with 3 slender setae; proximal basal endite without setae; distal basal endite with 1 seta and separate from endopod bearing 5 setae. Praecoxal and coxal endites of maxilla usually with 2 slender setae each; basal endite with 1 strong spine; endopod with 8 long and thick worm-like sensory setae. Praecoxal lobes of maxilliped syncoxa with 1 thin, slender and comparably short worm-like sensory seta on proximal lobe and 2 thick and long worm-like setae on medial lobe; distal lobe without seta, setal formula 1,2,0; coxal endite with 1 slender seta. P4 coxa, basis, endopod, and exopod segment 1 with posterior surface spinulation or not. P5 3-segmented, exopod with 2 unequal spines (1 shorter, terminal and 1 longer, inner and subterminal spine).</p>
            <p>Male. Unknown.</p>
            <p> Etymology. From “kyphos” (Greek, meaning bent), refers to the pronounced and strongly bent cephalon, viewed laterally. This characterization is combined with the existing generic name  Calanus . Gender masculine. </p>
            <p> Type species:  Kyphocalanus atlanticus sp. nov. , by monotypy. </p>
            <p> Remarks. Synapomorphies for the genus  Kyphocalanus are the presence of a knife handle-like basal part of the proximal seta of the mandibular basis and the maxillule distal basal endite and endopod separate and the distal basal endite bearing 1 seta only (vs 2–6 setae in other Bradfordians). </p>
            <p> In addition to the characters of the family, the new genus differs from the majority of other Bradfordian families/genera by the following derived characters: i) antenna basis without setae, shared with tharybid genus  Brodskius Markhaseva &amp; Ferrari, 2005 , contrasting the presence of 1–2 setae in other Bradfordians; ii) antenna endopod segment 1 without setae, shared with  Pseudophaenna Sars, 1902 (genus of unclear familial position) and some species of the tharybid genus  Undinella Sars, 1900 , and contrary to 1–2 setae in other Bradfordians; iii) antenna endopod segment 2 with fewer than 10 setae, shared with  Pseudophaenna , but this segment with 11–15 setae in other Bradfordians; iv) maxillule proximal basal endite without setae, shared with  Bradfordiella Andronov, 2007 (genus of unclear familial position), in contrast to the presence of 2–5 setae in other Bradfordians; v) maxilla proximal praecoxal endite with 2 setae, shared with  Rostrocalanus and some species of  Bradfordiella , but with 3–5 setae in other Bradfordians; vi) maxilla distal praecoxal endite and proximal coxal endite with 2 setae each, shared with some species of  Bradfordiella , and contrary to 3 setae in other Bradfordians; vii) maxilla distal coxal endite with 2 setae, shared with  Phaenna Claus, 1863 (family  Phaennidae ), but with 3 setae in other Bradfordians; viii) maxilla proximal basal endite with 1 setal element, shared with  Bradfordiella , but with 3–4 setal elements in other Bradfordians; ix) 1 seta on maxilliped coxal endite is shared with some species of  Undinella and  Bradfordiella , in contrast to presence of 2 or 3 setae in other Bradfordian genera. </p>
            <p> The similar derived armament of some oral limbs of  Kyphocalanus gen. nov. and  Bradfordiella is assumed to have arisen in a parallel development and independently, and thus both genera are not considered to be closely related. This is corroborated by apomorphies not shared by  Bradfordiella : i) praecoxal arthrite of maxillule with 3 setae (vs 9 in  Bradfordiella ); ii) distal coxal endite of maxilla with 2 setae (vs 3 setae in  Bradfordiella ); iii) maxilla distal basal endite plus endopod with 8 very long and thick, worm-like sensory setae, longer than all sclerotized setae of maxilla (vs only 6 short sensory setae of unclear morphology (Andronov 2007: 632) in  Bradfordiella ). </p>
            <p> In addition, the new genus does not share apomorphies of  Bradfordiella : i) antennule of only 18 articulated segments (vs 24 in  Kyphocalanus ); ii) mandibular basis lacking setae (viz. 2 setae in  Kyphocalanus ); iii) maxillule with coxal and basal endites reduced (vs these endites well developed in  Kyphocalanus ); v) maxilliped praecoxal endites of syncoxa lacking setae (with 1, 2, 0 setae in  Kyphocalanus ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE0E70FFA23274F1E4FE86FA28FE18	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Markhaseva, Elena L.;Schulz, Knud	Markhaseva, Elena L., Schulz, Knud (2009): A new family and genus of calanoid copepods (Crustacea) from the abyss of the Atlantic Ocean. Zootaxa 2304: 21-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.275327
03FE0E70FFA3327EF1E4FE40FBF4FF5A.text	03FE0E70FFA3327EF1E4FE40FBF4FF5A.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Kyphocalanus atlanticus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Kyphocalanus atlanticus sp. nov.</p>
            <p>(Figs 1–5)</p>
            <p>Holotype. Dissected adult female, body length 2.24 mm. ZMH Reg. no. K–41633. Collected on 28 July 2000, above the sea bed at abyssal depths (5390m).</p>
            <p>The holotype is deposited at the Zoological Museum Hamburg (ZMH), University of Hamburg.</p>
            <p>Type locality. South Atlantic (16º18’S 05º27’E).</p>
            <p>Description. Female. Prosome 5.2 times as long as urosome.</p>
            <p>Rostrum with two strong prong-like rami (Fig. 1 C–D). Cephalosome and somite 1 and somites 4 and 5 of prosome separate; posterior corners prolonged as triangular lobes (Fig. 1 A–B, E–F). Urosome of 4 somites. Caudal rami with 4 terminal setae, 1 ventral and a dorsal seta (Fig.1 E-F).</p>
            <p>Antennule (Fig. 2 A-B) extending to distal margin of pediger 4, of 24 free segments; armature as follows: I–2 s +?, II– IV–6 s + 1ae, V–2 s + 1ae, VI–2 s, VII–2 s + 1ae, VIII–2 s, IX–2 s + 1ae, X– XI-4 s + 1ae, XII–1 s, XIII–1s, XIV–2s + 1ae, XV–1s, XVI–2s + 1ae, XVII–1s, XVIII–1s, XIX–1s, XX–2s, XXI–1s + 1ae, XXII– 1s, XXIII–1s, XXIV–2s, XXV–2s, XXVI–2s, XXVII–XXVIII-5s + 1ae.</p>
            <p>Antenna (Fig. 2 C), coxa with 1 seta, basis without seta; exopod of 8 free segments with 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, and 3 setae, about 1.8 times as long as endopod; first endopodal segment without seta, second with 4 + 6 setae. Mandible (Fig. 2 D), gnathobase long and slender, cutting edge narrow, with 4 acute and 4 or 3 small teeth plus dorsal seta; basis with 2 setae, proximal with basal part haft-like; exopod 5-segmented with 1, 1, 1, 1, and 1 setae; endopod segment 1 without setae, segment 2 with 9 setae.</p>
            <p>Maxillule (Fig. 3 A), praecoxal endite with 3 terminal setae; coxal endite with 2 setae; proximal basal endite without seta, distal basal endite with 1 seta; endopod with 5 setae; exopod with 7 setae; coxal epipodite with 9 setae.</p>
            <p>Maxilla (Fig. 4), proximal praecoxal endite with 2 setae; distal praecoxal endite with 2 setae; proximal coxal endite with 2 setae; distal coxal endite with 2 setae; proximal basal endite with 1 spine; distal basal endite plus endopod with 8 long and thick worm-like sensory setae.</p>
            <p>Maxilliped (Fig. 3 B), syncoxa with 1 worm-like, comparably thin and short sensory seta on proximal praecoxal lobe, 2 long and thick worm-like setae on middle lobe extending to distal part of endopod; distal praecoxal lobe without setae; coxal lobe with 1 seta. Basis with 3 setae. Endopod 6-segmented with 2, 4, 2, 2, 2+1, and 4 setae.</p>
            <p>Swimming legs. P1 (Fig. 5 A–B), basis with medial distal seta nearly straight, or slightly curved with setules; endopod 1-segmented without lateral lobe, outer margin with slight undulation in a proximal half of segment; exopod segments 1 to 3 with 1 lateral spine each, spine of segment 1 the shortest exceeding base of following spine; spine of exopod segment 2 not reaching base of distalmost spine. P2–P4 (Fig. 5 C), coxa with 1 seta; basis without seta; endopod 2-segmented in P2, 3-segmented in P3–P4; exopods 3-segmented (exopodal segments 2 and 3 of P4 broken); lateral spines of P2–P3 compact, that of exopod segment 1 the shortest. Posterior surface of P4 spinulate.</p>
            <p>P5 (Fig. 3 C) 3-segmented, coxa and basis of equal length; coxa with distolateral row of 6 spinules, basis with patch of spinules distolaterally, exopod ornamented with rare surface spinules and 2 distal spines, terminal spine about 0.6 times length of subterminal inner spine.</p>
            <p> Etymology. The species name “  atlanticus ” refers to the type locality of the species in the Atlantic Ocean. The name is an adjective agreeing in gender with the (masculine) generic name. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE0E70FFA3327EF1E4FE40FBF4FF5A	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Markhaseva, Elena L.;Schulz, Knud	Markhaseva, Elena L., Schulz, Knud (2009): A new family and genus of calanoid copepods (Crustacea) from the abyss of the Atlantic Ocean. Zootaxa 2304: 21-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.275327
03FE0E70FFA9327EF1E4FE86FAC1F95D.text	03FE0E70FFA9327EF1E4FE86FAC1F95D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Kyphocalanus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Kyphocalanus sp. 1. </p>
            <p>(Figs 6–8)</p>
            <p>Material examined. Dissected adult female, body length 1.82 mm. Collected on 28 July 2000, above the sea bed at abyssal depths (5390m) in the South Atlantic (16º18’S 05º27’E).</p>
            <p>Specimen is deposited at the Zoological Museum Hamburg (ZMH), University of Hamburg.</p>
            <p>Description. Female. Prosome 5.1 times as long as urosome.</p>
            <p>Rostrum with two strong rami (Fig. 6 A–B). Cephalosome and somite 1 and somites 4 and 5 of prosome separate; posterior corners as triangular lobes (Fig. 6 A, C-D). Genital double-somite with attached spermatophore. Caudal rami with 4 terminal setae, 2 lateral broken, and 1 ventral seta, dorsal seta not located.</p>
            <p>Antennule broken posterior to ancestral segment XII. Setation as in type species.</p>
            <p>Antenna (Fig. 7 A) coxa with 1 seta, basis without seta, exopod of 8 free segments with 0, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, 1, and 3 setae, about 2.3 times as long as endopod; first endopodal segment without seta, second with 3 plus 6 setae. Mandible (Fig. 7 B), gnathobase long and slender, cutting edge with 4 larger, acute teeth and a row of small teeth plus dorsal seta; basis with 2 setae, proximal one with basal part knife handle-like; exopod 5-segmented with 5 setae, distal one distinctly smaller; endopod segment 1 without setae, segment 2 with 9 setae.</p>
            <p>Maxillule (Fig. 7 C), praecoxal endite with 3 terminal setae; coxal endite with 2 setae; proximal basal endite without seta, distal basal endite with 1 seta; endopod with 5 setae; exopod with 7 setae; coxal epipodite with 9 setae.</p>
            <p>Maxilla (Fig. 8 A–B), proximal praecoxal endite with 2 setae; distal praecoxal endite with 2 setae; proximal coxal endite with 1 seta; distal coxal endite with 2 setae; proximal basal endite with 1 spine; distal basal endite plus endopod with 8 long and thick worm-like sensory setae.</p>
            <p>Maxilliped (Fig. 7 D), syncoxa with 1 worm-like, comparably thin and short sensory seta on proximal praecoxal lobe, 2 long and thick worm-like setae setae on middle lobe, distal praecoxal lobe without setae; coxal lobe with 1 seta. Basis with 3 setae. Endopod of six segments with 2, 4, 2, 2, 2+1, and 4 setae.</p>
            <p>Swimming legs. P1 (Fig. 8 C), basis with medial distal seta significantly curved with setules; endopod 1- segmented without lateral lobe; exopod segments 1, 2, and 3 with lateral spines, the proximal spine is the longest, distal spine is the shortest; spine of exopod segment 1 exceeding base of following spine, spine of exopod segment 2 not reaching base of following spine.</p>
            <p>P2–P4 broken.</p>
            <p>P5 3-segmented, exopod with 1 terminal attenuation and 1 subterminal inner spine, inner spine about three times length of terminal attenuation; spinules present only on right and left coxa distolaterally.</p>
            <p> Remarks.  Kyphocalanus sp.1 differs from the type species in: i) smaller size (1.82 mm vs 2.24 mm in  K. atlanticus ); ii) shorter endopod of antenna (length ratio of exopod and endopod as 2.3:1, vs 1.8 in  K. atlanticus ); iii) 3 setae on inner lobe of antenna endopod segment 2 (vs 4 setae in  K. atlanticus ); iv) 1 seta on maxilla proximal coxal endite (vs 2 setae in  K. atlanticus ); v) P1 lateral spine of exopod segment 1 the longest compared to those of exopod segments 2 and 3 (vs this spine is the shortest in  K. atlanticus ); vi) spinules present only on the right coxa of P5 (vs spinules present on coxa, basis and exopod of P 5 in  K. atlanticus ). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE0E70FFA9327EF1E4FE86FAC1F95D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Markhaseva, Elena L.;Schulz, Knud	Markhaseva, Elena L., Schulz, Knud (2009): A new family and genus of calanoid copepods (Crustacea) from the abyss of the Atlantic Ocean. Zootaxa 2304: 21-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.275327
03FE0E70FFAD327AF1E4FF23FC2EF99C.text	03FE0E70FFAD327AF1E4FF23FC2EF99C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Kyphocalanus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Kyphocalanus sp. 2. </p>
            <p>(Figs 9–10)</p>
            <p>Material examined. Dissected adult female, body length 2.10 mm. Collected in 1998 above the sea bed at abyssal depths (4800 m) on Porcupine Abyssal plain (48º 58’N 16º 30’W).</p>
            <p>Specimen is deposited at the Zoological Museum Hamburg (ZMH), University of Hamburg.</p>
            <p>Description. Female. Prosome 5.3 times as long as urosome.</p>
            <p>Rostrum with two strong rami (Fig. 9 C). Cephalosome and somite 1 and somites 4 and 5 of prosome separate; posterior corners as triangular lobes (Fig. 9 A–B). Caudal rami with 4 terminal setae, 1 ventral seta, dorsal seta not located (Fig.9 B).</p>
            <p>Antennule entirely lost.</p>
            <p>Antenna, attributes of type species.</p>
            <p>Mandible (Fig. 10 A), gnathobase with 4 acutely pointed and 4 very small teeth plus dorsal seta; basis with 2 setae, proximal one larger and with proximal part haft-like; exopod 4(?)-segmented with 5 setae; endopod segment 1 without setae, segment 2 with 9 setae.</p>
            <p>Maxillule, shape similar and setation identical to that of type species.</p>
            <p>Maxilla (Fig. 10 C-D), proximal praecoxal endite with 2 setae; distal praecoxal endite with 2 setae; proximal coxal endite with 2 setae; distal coxal endite with 2 setae; proximal basal endite with 1 spine; distal basal endite plus endopod with 8 long and thick worm-like sensory setae.</p>
            <p>Maxilliped (Fig. 9 D), syncoxa with 1 worm-like, comparably thin and short sensory seta on proximal praecoxal lobe, 2 long and thick worm-like setae on middle lobe; distal praecoxal lobe without setae; coxal lobe with 1 seta. Basis with 3 setae. Endopod 6-segmented with 2, 4, 2, 2, 2+1, and 4 setae.</p>
            <p>Swimming legs. P1 (Fig. 9 E), basis with medial distal seta only slightly curved, with setules; endopod 1- segmented without lateral lobe; exopod segments 1, 2 and 3 with lateral spines, proximal spine is the shortest; spine of exopod segment 1 exceeding base of following spine, spine of exopod segment 2 not reaching base of following spine.</p>
            <p>Intact segments of P2–P4 as in type species, except for P4 surface not spinulated.</p>
            <p>P5 (Fig. 9 F) 3-segmented, similar to type species, but exopod surface spinules absent.</p>
            <p> Remarks.  Kyphocalanus sp. 2 differs from  K. atlanticus in the shape of rostrum, its rami being more closely spaced (Figs. 1 C, 9C) and in the presence of 3 setae on inner lobe of antenna endopod segment 2 (vs 4 setae in  K. atlanticus ). From all congeners it is distinct in that spinules are absent on the posterior surface of P5; from  Kyphocalanus sp. 1 it can be distinguished by the ratio of the lengths of P5 exopodal spines. </p>
            <p> It shares with the type species the following characteristics that differentiate both from  Kyphocalanus sp.1: i) its larger size (2.10–2.24 mm vs 1.82 mm in  Kyphocalanus sp.1); ii) a longer endopod of antenna (ratio of exopod and endopod lengths as 1.8 vs 2.3 in  Kyphocalanus sp.1); iii) presence of 2 setae on maxilla proximal coxal endite (vs 1 seta); iv) and P1 lateral spine of exopod segment 1 shorter than spines of exopod segments 2 and 3 (this spine is the longest in  Kyphocalanus sp.1). </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE0E70FFAD327AF1E4FF23FC2EF99C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Markhaseva, Elena L.;Schulz, Knud	Markhaseva, Elena L., Schulz, Knud (2009): A new family and genus of calanoid copepods (Crustacea) from the abyss of the Atlantic Ocean. Zootaxa 2304: 21-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.275327
03FE0E70FFAD3278F1E4F9C3FD51F83D.text	03FE0E70FFAD3278F1E4F9C3FD51F83D.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Kyphocalanus	<html xmlns:mods="http://www.loc.gov/mods/v3">
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            <p> Kyphocalanus sp. 3. </p>
            <p>Material examined. Dissected adult female in poor condition, body length 2.24 mm. Collected on 30 March 2005 above the sea bed at abyssal depths (3820- 3744 m) in Antarctic waters (62º 32’S 64º 39’W).</p>
            <p>Specimen is deposited at the Zoological Museum Hamburg (ZMH), University of Hamburg.</p>
            <p>Description. Female: total length about 2 mm, specimen in a very poor condition. Body shape similar to that of other species of the genus. Setation of intact antenna segments 1–6, mandible, maxillule and syncoxa of maxilliped typical of the genus. Maxilla configuration typical of the genus, praecoxal and coxal endites with 2 setae each, proximal basal endite as 1 setal element; distal endite plus endopod bear at least 7 (?) intact long ribbon-like sensory setae.</p>
            <p> Morphology of specimen is typical of the genus  Kyphocalanus , however due to its poor condition, it is difficult to discuss its relationship with congeners. </p>
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	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE0E70FFAD3278F1E4F9C3FD51F83D	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Markhaseva, Elena L.;Schulz, Knud	Markhaseva, Elena L., Schulz, Knud (2009): A new family and genus of calanoid copepods (Crustacea) from the abyss of the Atlantic Ocean. Zootaxa 2304: 21-40, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.275327
