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Trichotria
''Trichotria'' is a genus of rotifers belonging to the family Trichotriidae. The genus has almost cosmopolitan distribution In biogeography, cosmopolitan distribution is the term for the range of a taxon that extends across all or most of the world in appropriate habitats. Such a taxon, usually a species, is said to exhibit cosmopolitanism or cosmopolitism. The ext .... Species: * '' Trichotria brevidactyla'' Harring, 1913 * '' Trichotria buchneri'' Koste, Shiel & Tan, 1988 References Ploima {{rotifer-stub ...
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Trichotria Brevidactyla
''Trichotria'' is a genus of rotifers belonging to the family Trichotriidae. The genus has almost cosmopolitan distribution In biogeography, cosmopolitan distribution is the term for the range of a taxon that extends across all or most of the world in appropriate habitats. Such a taxon, usually a species, is said to exhibit cosmopolitanism or cosmopolitism. The ext .... Species: * '' Trichotria brevidactyla'' Harring, 1913 * '' Trichotria buchneri'' Koste, Shiel & Tan, 1988 References Ploima {{rotifer-stub ...
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Trichotria Buchneri
''Trichotria'' is a genus of rotifers belonging to the family Trichotriidae. The genus has almost cosmopolitan distribution. Species: * ''Trichotria brevidactyla ''Trichotria'' is a genus of rotifers belonging to the family Trichotriidae. The genus has almost cosmopolitan distribution In biogeography, cosmopolitan distribution is the term for the range of a taxon that extends across all or most of t ...'' Harring, 1913 * '' Trichotria buchneri'' Koste, Shiel & Tan, 1988 References Ploima {{rotifer-stub ...
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Trichotriidae
Trichotriidae is a family of rotifers belonging to the order Ploima Ploima is an order of rotifers, microscopic invertebrates found in marine and freshwater habitats. Families According to the World Register of Marine Species, Ploima includes the following fifteen families: * Asplanchnidae *Brachionidae * Dicran .... Genera: * '' Macrochaetus'' Perty, 1850 * '' Pulchritia'' Luo & Segers, 2013 * '' Trichotria'' Bory De St.Vincent, 1827 * '' Wolga'' Skorikov, 1903 References Ploima Rotifer families {{rotifer-stub ...
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Jean Baptiste Bory De Saint-Vincent
Jean-Baptiste Geneviève Marcellin Bory de Saint-Vincent was a French naturalist, officer and politician. He was born on 6 July 1778 in Agen (Lot-et-Garonne) and died on 22 December 1846 in Paris. Biologist and geographer, he was particularly interested in volcanology, systematics and botany. Life Youth Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint Vincent was born at Agen on 6 July 1778. His parents were Géraud Bory de Saint-Vincent and Madeleine de Journu; his father's family were petty nobility who played important roles at the bar and in the judiciary, during and after the French Revolution. Instilled with sentiments hostile to the revolution from childhood,Biography of Jean-Baptiste Bory de Saint-Vincent on the website of the French National Assembly: http://www2.assemblee-nationale.fr/sycomore/fiche/(num_dept)/16507 he studied first at the college of Agen, then with his uncle Journu-Auber in Bordeaux in 1787. He may have attended courses in medicine and surgery from 1791 to 1793. During ...
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Rotifers
The rotifers (, from the Latin , "wheel", and , "bearing"), commonly called wheel animals or wheel animalcules, make up a phylum (Rotifera ) of microscopic and near-microscopic pseudocoelomate animals. They were first described by Rev. John Harris in 1696, and other forms were described by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in 1703. Most rotifers are around long (although their size can range from to over ), and are common in freshwater environments throughout the world with a few saltwater species. Some rotifers are free swimming and truly planktonic, others move by inchworming along a substrate, and some are sessile, living inside tubes or gelatinous holdfasts that are attached to a substrate. About 25 species are colonial (e.g., '' Sinantherina semibullata''), either sessile or planktonic. Rotifers are an important part of the freshwater zooplankton, being a major foodsource and with many species also contributing to the decomposition of soil organic matter. Most species of the ro ...
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Cosmopolitan Distribution
In biogeography, cosmopolitan distribution is the term for the range of a taxon that extends across all or most of the world in appropriate habitats. Such a taxon, usually a species, is said to exhibit cosmopolitanism or cosmopolitism. The extreme opposite of a cosmopolitan species is an endemic one, being found only in a single geographical location. Qualification The caveat “in appropriate habitat” is used to qualify the term "cosmopolitan distribution", excluding in most instances polar regions, extreme altitudes, oceans, deserts, or small, isolated islands. For example, the housefly is highly cosmopolitan, yet is neither oceanic nor polar in its distribution. Related terms and concepts The term pandemism also is in use, but not all authors are consistent in the sense in which they use the term; some speak of pandemism mainly in referring to diseases and pandemics, and some as a term intermediate between endemism and cosmopolitanism, in effect regarding pandemism as ...
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