original description
Chamberlin, R. V. (1947). Seven new American millipeds. Proceedings of the Biological Society of Washington, 60: 9-13
page(s): 9 [details]
taxonomy source
Shear, W. A.; Krejca, J. K. (2007). Revalidation of the milliped genus Amplaria Chamberlin 1941 (Diplopoda, Chordeumatida, Striariidae), and description of two new species from caves in Sequoia and Kings Canyon National Parks, California. Zootaxa, 1532: 23-39
page(s): 27 [details]
additional source
Hoffman, R. L. (1999). Checklist of the millipedes of North and Middle America. <em>Virginia Museum of Natural History, special publication.</em> 8: 1-584.
page(s): 209 [details]
new combination reference
Shear, W. A.; Marek, P. E. (2024). The millipede family Striariidae Bollman, 1893. IX. The identity of Striaria californica Cook, 1899, and the new genus Bayaria for Striaria nana Loomis, 1936, with a key to genera and an annotated checklist of the Striariidae (Diplopoda, Chordeumatida, Striarioidea). <em>Zootaxa.</em> 5463(4): 524-544., available online at https://mapress.com/zt/article/view/zootaxa.5463.4.4
page(s): 530 [details] Available for editors
From editor or global species database
Taxonomic remark Shear & Krejca (2007) on page 27 state: "If, as we suspect, Striaria nana Loomis 1936 and Striaria carmela Chamberlin 1947 are both junior synonyms of S. californica (they are certainly synonyms of each other, based on an examination of the types [USNM]; nana is the senior name), it indeed belongs to an undiagnosed genus." They also state that S. californica may belong in Amplaria. [details]