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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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Male P. pusilla showing gnathopod 2 with proximal knob and trapezoidal projection onpropodus
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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2006 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
We find this amphipod amoung blades of the green alga Ulva, low intertidal, where it is beautifully camouflaged. Note the prominent compound eye. The bright red color is due to the visual pigment rhodopsin, present in all known animal photoreptors.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
This female skeleton shrimp is climging to a red alga. She is brooding her young in the red dotted marsupium. Here five juveniles are climbing over their mother.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
These are tube dwelling, nonnative amphipods introduced into harbors by shipping. Adult males, such as this one, leave the safety of their tube to cruise about in search of a receptive female.
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Dmitry A. Sidorov, Andrey A. Gontcharov, Dmitry M. Palatov, Steven J. Taylor, Alexander A. Semenchenko
Subterranean Biology
Figure 2.Photograph of live specimen of Zenkevitchia yakovi sp. n. in the cave “Istočnik Tcebel’da”, from right side. Photography by A. Korotaev.
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Figure 1.Elasmopus yucalpeten sp. n., holotype male, 6.6 mm, CYMX-1-EY; Yucalpeten harbor, Yucatan, Mexico. Scale bar for H represents 1 mm; scale bars for G1 and G2 represent 0.3 mm; scale bars for AF and T represent 0.1 mm.