Chaetoceros Affinis F. Parallelus
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Chaetoceros Affinis F. Parallelus
''Chaetoceros'' is probably the largest genus of marine planktonic diatoms with approximately 400 species described, although many of these descriptions are no longer valid. It is often very difficult to distinguish between different ''Chaetoceros'' species. Several attempts have been made to restructure this large genus into subgenera and this work is still in progress.Tomas, C. R., Hasle G. R., Syvertsen, E. E., Steidinger, K. A., Tangen, K., Throndsen, J., Heimdal, B. R., (1997). ''Identifying Marine Phytoplankton'', Academic Press.Rines J. E. B., Theriot E. C., (2003). ''Systematics of Chaetocerotaceae (Bacillariophyceae). I. A phylogenetic analysis of the family'', Phycological research 51: 83–98. However, most of the effort to describe species has been focused in boreal areas, and the genus is cosmopolitan, so there are probably many tropical species still undescribed.J.E.B. Rines, P. Boonruang and E.C. Theriot., (2000).'' Chaetoceros phuketensis sp. nov. (Bacillariop ...
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Colony Of Chaetoceros Socialis
In modern parlance, a colony is a territory subject to a form of foreign rule. Though dominated by the foreign colonizers, colonies remain separate from the administration of the original country of the colonizers, the '' metropolitan state'' (or "mother country"). This administrative colonial separation makes colonies neither incorporated territories nor client states. Some colonies have been organized either as dependent territories that are not sufficiently self-governed, or as self-governed colonies controlled by colonial settlers. The term colony originates from the ancient Roman '' colonia'', a type of Roman settlement. Derived from ''colon-us'' (farmer, cultivator, planter, or settler), it carries with it the sense of 'farm' and 'landed estate'. Furthermore the term was used to refer to the older Greek ''apoikia'' (), which were overseas settlements by ancient Greek city-states. The city that founded such a settlement became known as its ''metropolis'' ("mother-ci ...
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Chaetoceros Angularis
''Chaetoceros'' is probably the largest genus of marine planktonic diatoms with approximately 400 species described, although many of these descriptions are no longer valid. It is often very difficult to distinguish between different ''Chaetoceros'' species. Several attempts have been made to restructure this large genus into subgenera and this work is still in progress.Tomas, C. R., Hasle G. R., Syvertsen, E. E., Steidinger, K. A., Tangen, K., Throndsen, J., Heimdal, B. R., (1997). ''Identifying Marine Phytoplankton'', Academic Press.Rines J. E. B., Theriot E. C., (2003). ''Systematics of Chaetocerotaceae (Bacillariophyceae). I. A phylogenetic analysis of the family'', Phycological research 51: 83–98. However, most of the effort to describe species has been focused in boreal areas, and the genus is cosmopolitan, so there are probably many tropical species still undescribed.J.E.B. Rines, P. Boonruang and E.C. Theriot., (2000).'' Chaetoceros phuketensis sp. nov. (Bacillariop ...
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Chaetoceros Bermejense
''Chaetoceros'' is probably the largest genus of marine planktonic diatoms with approximately 400 species described, although many of these descriptions are no longer valid. It is often very difficult to distinguish between different ''Chaetoceros'' species. Several attempts have been made to restructure this large genus into subgenera and this work is still in progress.Tomas, C. R., Hasle G. R., Syvertsen, E. E., Steidinger, K. A., Tangen, K., Throndsen, J., Heimdal, B. R., (1997). ''Identifying Marine Phytoplankton'', Academic Press.Rines J. E. B., Theriot E. C., (2003). ''Systematics of Chaetocerotaceae (Bacillariophyceae). I. A phylogenetic analysis of the family'', Phycological research 51: 83–98. However, most of the effort to describe species has been focused in boreal areas, and the genus is cosmopolitan, so there are probably many tropical species still undescribed.J.E.B. Rines, P. Boonruang and E.C. Theriot., (2000).'' Chaetoceros phuketensis sp. nov. (Bacillario ...
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Chaetoceros Bacteriastroides
''Chaetoceros'' is probably the largest genus of marine planktonic diatoms with approximately 400 species described, although many of these descriptions are no longer valid. It is often very difficult to distinguish between different ''Chaetoceros'' species. Several attempts have been made to restructure this large genus into subgenera and this work is still in progress.Tomas, C. R., Hasle G. R., Syvertsen, E. E., Steidinger, K. A., Tangen, K., Throndsen, J., Heimdal, B. R., (1997). ''Identifying Marine Phytoplankton'', Academic Press.Rines J. E. B., Theriot E. C., (2003). ''Systematics of Chaetocerotaceae (Bacillariophyceae). I. A phylogenetic analysis of the family'', Phycological research 51: 83–98. However, most of the effort to describe species has been focused in boreal areas, and the genus is cosmopolitan, so there are probably many tropical species still undescribed.J.E.B. Rines, P. Boonruang and E.C. Theriot., (2000).'' Chaetoceros phuketensis sp. nov. (Bacillario ...
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Chaetoceros Bacteriastroides F
''Chaetoceros'' is probably the largest genus of marine planktonic diatoms with approximately 400 species described, although many of these descriptions are no longer valid. It is often very difficult to distinguish between different ''Chaetoceros'' species. Several attempts have been made to restructure this large genus into subgenera and this work is still in progress.Tomas, C. R., Hasle G. R., Syvertsen, E. E., Steidinger, K. A., Tangen, K., Throndsen, J., Heimdal, B. R., (1997). ''Identifying Marine Phytoplankton'', Academic Press.Rines J. E. B., Theriot E. C., (2003). ''Systematics of Chaetocerotaceae (Bacillariophyceae). I. A phylogenetic analysis of the family'', Phycological research 51: 83–98. However, most of the effort to describe species has been focused in boreal areas, and the genus is cosmopolitan, so there are probably many tropical species still undescribed.J.E.B. Rines, P. Boonruang and E.C. Theriot., (2000).'' Chaetoceros phuketensis sp. nov. (Bacillario ...
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Chaetoceros Bacteriastrius
''Chaetoceros'' is probably the largest genus of marine planktonic diatoms with approximately 400 species described, although many of these descriptions are no longer valid. It is often very difficult to distinguish between different ''Chaetoceros'' species. Several attempts have been made to restructure this large genus into subgenera and this work is still in progress.Tomas, C. R., Hasle G. R., Syvertsen, E. E., Steidinger, K. A., Tangen, K., Throndsen, J., Heimdal, B. R., (1997). ''Identifying Marine Phytoplankton'', Academic Press.Rines J. E. B., Theriot E. C., (2003). ''Systematics of Chaetocerotaceae (Bacillariophyceae). I. A phylogenetic analysis of the family'', Phycological research 51: 83–98. However, most of the effort to describe species has been focused in boreal areas, and the genus is cosmopolitan, so there are probably many tropical species still undescribed.J.E.B. Rines, P. Boonruang and E.C. Theriot., (2000).'' Chaetoceros phuketensis sp. nov. (Bacillario ...
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Chaetoceros Audax
''Chaetoceros'' is probably the largest genus of marine planktonic diatoms with approximately 400 species described, although many of these descriptions are no longer valid. It is often very difficult to distinguish between different ''Chaetoceros'' species. Several attempts have been made to restructure this large genus into subgenera and this work is still in progress.Tomas, C. R., Hasle G. R., Syvertsen, E. E., Steidinger, K. A., Tangen, K., Throndsen, J., Heimdal, B. R., (1997). ''Identifying Marine Phytoplankton'', Academic Press.Rines J. E. B., Theriot E. C., (2003). ''Systematics of Chaetocerotaceae (Bacillariophyceae). I. A phylogenetic analysis of the family'', Phycological research 51: 83–98. However, most of the effort to describe species has been focused in boreal areas, and the genus is cosmopolitan, so there are probably many tropical species still undescribed.J.E.B. Rines, P. Boonruang and E.C. Theriot., (2000).'' Chaetoceros phuketensis sp. nov. (Bacillario ...
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