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Journal ArticleDOI

A Method for Studying the External Anatomy of Copepods

Arthur G. Humes, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1964 - 
- Vol. 6, Iss: 3, pp 238-240
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TLDR
In this article, it was shown that lactic acid is the best clearing agent for the preparation of temporary mounts of whole or dissected copepods, and that obese forms or specimens with a thin cuticle are best transferred through mixtures of the medium in which they have been kept and Lactic acid.
Abstract
We have found lactic acid to be the best clearing agent for the preparation of temporary mounts of whole or dissected copepods. Fresh, alcoholic, or formalin fixed specimens become cleared within a few minutes to some hours, depending upon their size and the duration of preservation. When first placed in the un diluted acid, the copepods may become somewhat contracted, but soon regain, and thereafter retain, their normal size and shape. In order to avoid rupture, obese forms or specimens with a thin cuticle are best transferred through mixtures of the medium in which they have been kept and lactic acid. Since the latter is dense, layering the fluids in a small dish is usually satisfactory: the original medium will evaporate slowly, leaving the speci mens in the acid. Fluids with appreciable concentrations of dissolved salts, however, should be avoided, preferably by transferring the specimens first either to alcohol or to fresh-water.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Larval Development of Caribeopsyllus amphiodiae (Thaumatopsyllidae: Copepoda), an Enterozoic Parasite of the Brittle Star Amphiodia urtica

TL;DR: Shifts in the timing of ontogenesis, atypical naupliar morphology, and unique adult body set apart the thaumatopsyllids from other copepods, unlike the tagmosis of most gymnoplean and podopleanCopepods.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two new species of Pupulina van Beneden, 1892 (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida: Caligidae) from mobulid rays off South Africa.

TL;DR: A dichotomous key to distinguish the five species of Pupulina is provided and P. merira is the only species with the abdomen only about two-thirds the length of the genital complex and the caudal rami about the same length as the abdomen.
Journal ArticleDOI

Copepodid stages of Ergasilus hypomesi Yamaguti (Copepoda, Poecilostomatoida, Ergasilidae) from a brackish lake in Korea

TL;DR: AllCopepodid stages and free‐swimming adults of Ergasilus hypomesi Yamaguti collected from plankton samples from a brackish lake in Korea are described and it is noticed that the early copepodids of the Ergasilidae show the characteristic setation on the biramous legs and proximal segments of the antennule.
Journal ArticleDOI

New species of Stygiopontius (Copepoda: Siphonostomatoida: Dirivultidae) from a deep-sea hydrothermal volcano in the New Ireland Fore-Arc system (Papua New Guinea)

TL;DR: A male of the new species Stygiopontius senckenbergi, endemic to deep-sea hydrothermal vents, is described from a raised fault block structure south of Edison seamount of the New Ireland Fore-Arc system (Papua New Guinea).
Journal Article

Siphonostomatoid copepods from deep-sea hydrothermal sites on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge west of the Azores

TL;DR: Les pattes 1-4 du copepodite V ont des rames a 2 segments mais chez le mâle les rames sont segmentees comme chez l'adulte (3 segments sauf dans la quatrieme patte qui a 3 segments).
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Preparation of Copepod Mounts for Taxonomic Work and for Permanent Collections

TL;DR: An investigation of the microfauna of the shore at Whitstable, Kent, it was necessary to examine and to identify the many Harpacticoid copepods which occurred there.