New species discovered in the Antarctic!
Added: (Wed Jun 13 2007)
Just as the Natural History Museum open their latest exhibition, �Ice Station Antarctica� (showing from 25th May 2007 to 20th April 2008), the Journal of Natural History reports on a new species of crustacean discovered in the Antarctic, with an article entitled �New species of Brodskius, Rythabis, and Omorius (Crustacea: Calanoida) from deep Antarctic waters� (p. 731, Volume 41 issue 13-16. Authors: Elena L. Markhaseva; Knud Schulz).
This issue also reports on a new pseudoscorpion species from Crete (Greece); Ptyctimous mites (Acari, Oribatida) from the Ecuador rainforest; Molluscs (Rissoidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda)) from northeast Atlantic seamounts; and a new subspecies of Portuguese salamander.
New species are being discovered all the time, and these are reported in the Journal of Natural History, published by Taylor & Francis. The journal publishes original research and reviews in evolutionary and general biology and on the interaction of organisms with their environment.
For more information on the exhibition, visit the Natural History Museum site at: www.nhm.ac.uk
For subscription information for Journal of Natural History, to download a free sample copy or to view the journal online visit www.informaworld.com/tnah.
For more information contact:
Shelley Arthur
Marketing Manager
Taylor & Francis Group
4 Park Square, Milton Park
Abingdon, Oxfordshire OX14 4RN
Phone: 0207 017 6219
Shelley.arthur@tandf.co.uk
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Submitted by:
Shelley Arthur
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