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Anamastigona pulchella (Silvestri, 1894)

1025282  (urn:lsid:marinespecies.org:taxname:1025282)

accepted
Species
marine, brackish, fresh, terrestrial
(of ) Silvestri, F. (1894). Contribuzione alla conoscenza dei Chilopodi, Symphili, Pauropodi e Diplopodi dell'Umbria e del Lazio. Bollettino della Società Romana per gli Studi Zoologici, 3(5-6): 191-201. Roma
page(s): 199 [details] 
Sierwald, P.; Decker, P.; Spelda, J. (2024). MilliBase. Anamastigona pulchella (Silvestri, 1894). Accessed through: Marine Species Traits editorial board (2024) Marine Species Traits at: https://www.marinespecies.org/traits/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1025282 on 2025-04-04
Marine Species Traits editorial board (2025). Marine Species Traits. Anamastigona pulchella (Silvestri, 1894). Accessed at: https://www.marinespecies.org/traits/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=1025282 on 2025-04-04
Date
action
by
2017-08-02 13:30:38Z
created
2021-07-02 17:39:01Z
changed

original description (of ) Silvestri, F. (1894). Contribuzione alla conoscenza dei Chilopodi, Symphili, Pauropodi e Diplopodi dell'Umbria e del Lazio. Bollettino della Società Romana per gli Studi Zoologici, 3(5-6): 191-201. Roma
page(s): 199 [details] 

additional source Lindner, N. E.; Reip, H. S.; Spelda, J. (2010). Anamastigona pulchella (Silvestri, 1898) (Diplopoda: Chordeumatida: Anthroleucosomatidae) – ein für Deutschland neuer Tausendfüßer. <em>Schubartiana.</em> 4: 1-8. [details] 

additional source Kime, R. D.; Enghoff, H. (2021). Atlas of European millipedes 3: Order Chordeumatida (Class Diplopoda). <em>European Journal of Taxonomy.</em> 769: 1-244., available online at https://doi.org/10.5852/ejt.2021.769.1497
page(s): 36, Fig. 3D; note: Among stones and leaf litter (Silvestri 1903). The finds from Northern Ireland are from woodland (Anderson 1996); those from Germany, Great Britain and France all seem to be synanthropic (Lindner et...    
Among stones and leaf litter (Silvestri 1903). The finds from Northern Ireland are from woodland (Anderson 1996); those from Germany, Great Britain and France all seem to be synanthropic (Lindner et al. 2010; Gregory et al. 2015; Geoffroy in litt.). On Madeira, A. pulchella is common in the indigenous laurel forest (laurisilva) where it was mostly found under leaf litter, but also under stones, under moss on stones, under bark, in a bracket fungus, and in dead wood; at night it was observed crawling on tree trunks (HE pers. obs.).
[details] 
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