Abstract Abstract
Fauna Europaea provides a public web-service with an index of scientific names (including important synonyms) of all living European land and freshwater animals, their geographical distribution at country level (up to the Urals, excluding the Caucasus region), and some additional information. The Fauna Europaea project covers about 230,000 taxonomic names, including 130,000 accepted species and 14,000 accepted subspecies, which is much more than the originally projected number of 100,000 species. This represents a huge effort by more than 400 contributing specialists throughout Europe and is a unique (standard) reference suitable for many users in science, government, industry, nature conservation and education.
Hirudinea is a fairly small group of Annelida, with about 680 described species, most of which live in freshwater habitats, but several species are (sub)terrestrial or marine. In the Fauna Europaea database the taxon is represented by 87 species in 6 families. Two closely related groups, currently treated as distinct lineages within the Annelida, are the Acanthobdellea (2 species worldwide, of which 1 in Europe) and the Branchiobdellea (about 140 species worldwide, of which 10 in Europe). This paper includes a complete list of European taxa belonging to the Hirudinea, Acanthobdellea and Branchiobdellea. Recent research on a limited number of taxa suggests that our current appreciation of species diversity of Hirudinea in Europe is still provisional: on the one hand, cryptic, unrecognised taxa are expected to emerge; on the other, the status of some taxa currently treated as distinct species deserves revisiting.
Keywords: Annelida , Hirudinea , Acanthobdellea , Branchiobdellea , leeches, Europe
Introduction
The European Commission published the European Community Biodiversity Strategy, providing a framework for development of Community policies and instruments in order to comply with the Convention on Biological Diversity. This Strategy recognises the current incomplete state of knowledge at all levels concerning biodiversity, which is a constraint on the successful implementation of the Convention. Fauna Europaea contributes to this Strategy by supporting one of the main themes: to identify and catalogue the components of European biodiversity into a database in order to serve as a basic tool for science and conservation policies.
With regard to biodiversity in Europe, both science and policies depend on a knowledge of its components. The assessment of biodiversity, monitoring changes, sustainable exploitation of biodiversity, and much legislative work depend upon a validated overview of taxonomic biodiversity. Towards this end Fauna Europaea plays a major role, providing a web-based information infrastructure with an index of scientific names (including important synonyms; i.e. alternative names still in use, or at lead found in recent literature) of all living European land and freshwater animals, their geographical distribution at country level and some additional useful information. In this sense, the Fauna Europaea database provides a unique reference for many user-groups such as scientists, governments, industries, conservation communities and educational programs.
Fauna Europaea started in 2000 as an EC-FP5 four-year project, delivering its first release in 2004. After thirteen years of steady progress, in order to improve the dissemination of Fauna Europaea results and to increase the general awareness and acknowledgement of Fauna Europaea contributors, novel e-Publishing tools have been used to prepare data papers of all 58 major taxonomic groups (Jong et al. 2014).
Data-papers & gap-analysis
In order to improve the dissemination and citation of Fauna Europaea and to increase the acknowledge of the Fauna Europaea contributors, a special Biodiversity Data Journal Series has been compiled using novel e-Publishing tools, called Contributions on Fauna Europaea, preparing data-papers of all major Fauna Europaea taxonomic groups. This work was initiated during the ViBRANT project and is further supported by the recently started EU BON project. This contribution represents the first publication of the Fauna Europaea Annelida–Hirudinea data sector as a BDJ data paper.
In the EU BON project (Hoffmann et al. 2014) also further steps will be made on implementing Fauna Europaea as a basic tool for biodiversity research and for taxonomic expertise evaluation and management in Europe, using Fauna Europaea as a standard reference for taxonomic Information. The Fauna Europaea data-papers will contribute to a quality assessement on biodiversity data by providing estimates on gaps in taxonomic information and knowledge (see Table 1).
Table 1.
Responsible specialists per family in Annelida–Hirudinea.
FAMILY | NUMBER OF SPECIES IN FAEU (in brackets, estimated actual number of existing species) | SPECIALIST(S) |
Acanthobdellidae | 1 (1) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Branchiobdellidae | 9 (9) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Cambarincolidae | 1 (1) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Erpobdellidae | 32 (~42) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Glossiphoniidae | 18 (~20) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Haemopidae | 2 (2) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Hirudinidae | 5 (5) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Piscicolidae | 27 (~29) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
Xerobdellidae | 3 (3) | Alessandro Minelli, Boris Sket |
General description
Purpose
Fauna Europaea is a database of the scientific names and distribution of all living, currently known European land and fresh-water animal species assembled by a large network of experts. An extended description of the Fauna Europaea project can be found in Jong et al. 2014. A summary is given in the sections below.
The Annelida–Hirudinea, together with their allies Acanthobdellea and Branchiobdellea, are one of the 58 Fauna Europaea major taxonomic groups, covering 98 species (Fig. 2). The data were acquired and checked by two specialists (Tables 1, 2).
Figure 2.
FaEu Annelida–Hirudinea species per family. See Table 1 for family statistics.
Table 2.
Responsible associated specialists in Annelida–Hirudinea.
GROUP or AREA | SPECIALIST(S) |
Hirudinidae | Serge Utevsky |
Eastern European countries | Serge Utevsky |
Additional information
The Hirudinea or leeches form a quite small group of macrophagous or blood-sucking annelids, including about 680 species (Sket and Trontelj 2008), probably derived from a lineage of freshwater oligochaetes. Their presence in the sea, and in terrestrial habitats, is secondary, following a primary radiation in freshwater habitats. About 15% of the ca. 680 species described thus far (Sket and Trontelj 2008), including many representatives of the Piscicolidae and all members of the Ozobranchidae, are marine; ca. 100 species (all members of the Americobdellidae, Cylicobdellidae, Haemadipsidae, Xerobdellidae, a few Hirudinidae and one member of the Salifidae) are terrestrial or semiterrestrial, all the remaining Hirudinea live in freshwater habitats. Three main feeding styles can be recognized among the leeches. The Rhynchobdellida, represented in the continental fauna of Europe by members of the Glossiphoniidae (Fig. 3) and the Piscicolidae, are provided with a stiff protrusible proboscis through which they pierce the skin of their preys (cold- and warm-blooded vertebrates, mollusks, insect larvae) and suck their body fluids or tissues; within the Arhynchobdellida, many representatives of the Hirudiniformes (in Europe, those of the family Hirudinidae) are provided with toothed muscular ‘mandibles’ used to produce superficial wounds in the skin of their vertebrate hosts, the blood of which they feed on, while those of other families (in Europe, Haemopidae and Xerobdellidae (Fig. 4), and also the Erpobdelliformes (only family Erpodbellidae native in Europe) are macrophagous and ingest whole preys, e.g. insect larvae, crustaceans, oligochaetes. Most leeches are temporary ectoparasites, their contact with their hosts being limited to the feeding phase, but many members of the Rhynchobdellida live more ore less permanently attached. All leeches are hermaphrodite. Large species may suck human blood. Hirudo spp. have been traditionally used in medicine.
Figure 3.
The common snail leech Glossiphonia complanata complanata (right) and the lake Ohrid endemic Glossiphonia pulchella.
Figure 4.
The European terrestrial leech Xerobdella lecomtei.
The Annelida–Hirudinea database in Fauna Europaea includes also information on two smaller annelid groups, the Branchiobdellea and the Acanthobdellea, often treated in the past as members of the Hirudinea, in which case the true leeches (i.e., the Hirudinea of most current classifications) are often renamed Euhirudinea (e.g., Siddall et al. 2001). Today, the Hirudinea (in strict sense, corresponding to Euhirudinea of other classifications), Branchiobdellea and Acanthobdellea are treated by most authorities as distinct lineages within the clitellate annelids, alongside the taxa traditionally grouped as the Oligochaeta, Acanthobdellea and Branchiobdellea. All Branchiobdellea, ca. 140 species worldwide (Gelder 2010), are small (1–12 mm) freshwater worms that live on crustaceans, mainly crayfish. The Acanthobdellea, 2 species of cold riverine waters, are parasitic on fish, mainly salmon.
Molecular phylogenetic studies have heavily impacted on the internal classification of the Hirudinea (e.g., Borda and Siddall 2004) and more progress is expected from further studies. Detailed molecular systematics studies have shown gross errors in the traditional delineation of leech species, including the case of the European medicinal leech – a concept under which other species must be recognized besides Hirudo medicinalis Linnaeus, 1758 (Trontelj and Utevsky 2005). On the other hand, reproductive isolation seems not to be completed between lineages currently treated as distinct species, such as within the same group of species (S. Utevsky, pers. com.). Discrepancies between the results of morphological vs. molecular systematic analyses have also been noted in other groups, as in the endemic lineage of Dina species inhabiting Lake Ochrid (Trajanovski et al. 2010) and future reassessments are likely to increase the number of taxa worth recognition at the species level.
A revised delineation of genera and families is also suggested by a first molecular taxonomic study on Branchiobdellea (Williams et al. 2013).
Project description
Title
This BDJ data paper includes the taxonomic indexing efforts in Fauna Europaea on European Annelida–Hirudinea covering the first two versions of Fauna Europaea worked on between 2000 and 2013 (up to version 2.6).
Personnel
The taxonomic framework of Fauna Europaea includes partner institutes, providing taxonomic expertise and information, and expert networks taking care of data collation.
Every taxonomic group is covered by at least one Group Coordinator responsible for the supervision and integrated input of taxonomic and distributional data for a particular group. The Fauna Europaea checklist would not have reached its current level of completion without the input from several groups of specialists. The formal responsibility of collating and delivering the data of relevant families rested with a number of Taxonomic Specialists Table 1. For Annelida–Hirudinea the Group Coordinator is Alessandro Minelli, who is also Taxonomic Specialist together with Boris Sket. Associate Specialist Serge Utevsky deserves credit for his important contributions at various levels, especially for Hirudinidae, and for distribution in Eastern European Table 2 countries.
A more detailed overview of the Fauna Europaea classification and expertise network for Annelida–Hirudinea can be found here: http://www.faunaeur.org/experts.php?id=80.
Data management tasks are taken care of by the Fauna Europaea project bureau. During the project phase (until 2004) a network of principal partners took care of diverse management tasks: Zoological Museum Amsterdam (general management & system development), Zoological Museum of Copenhagen (data collation), National Museum of Natural History in Paris (data validation) and Museum and Institute of Zoology in Warsaw (NAS extension). Since the formal project ending (from 2004, till 2014) all tasks have been undertaken by the Zoological Museum Amsterdam.
Study area description
The area study covers the European mainland (Western Palearctic), including the Macaronesian islands, excluding the Caucasus, Turkey, Arabian Peninsula and Northern Africa (see: Geographic coverage).
Design description
Standards. Group coordinators and taxonomic specialists have to deliver the (sub)species names according to strict standards. The names provided by Fauna Europaea are scientific names. The taxonomic scope includes issues like, (1) the definition of criteria used to identify the accepted species-group taxa, (2) the hierarchy (classification scheme) for the accommodation of the all accepted species, (3) relevant synonyms, and (4) the correct nomenclature. The Fauna Europaea 'Guidelines for Group Coordinators and Taxonomic Specialists', include the standards, protocols, scope, and limits that provide the instructions for the more than 400 specialists contributing to the project, strictly following the provisions of the current edition of the International Code of Zoological Nomenclature.
Data management. The data records could either be entered offline into a preformatted MS-Excel worksheet or directly into the Fauna Europaea transaction database using an online browser interface (see Fig. 5). Since 2013 the data servers are hosted at the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin.
Figure 5.
Fauna Europaea on-line (browser interfaces) and off-line (spreadsheets) data entry tools.
Data set. The Fauna Europaea basic data set consists of: accepted (sub)species names (including authorship), synonym names (including authorship), a taxonomic hierarchy/classification, misapplied names (including misspellings and alternative taxonomic views), homonym annotations, expert details, European distribution (at country level), Global distribution (only for European species), taxonomic reference (optional), occurrence reference (optional).
Funding
Fauna Europaea was funded by the European Commission under various framework programs (see Acknowledgement).
Sampling methods
Study extent
See spatial coverage and geographic coverage descriptions.
Sampling description
Fauna Europaea data have been assembled by principal taxonomic experts, based on their individual expertise, including literature sources, collection research, and field observations. In total no less than 476 experts contributed taxonomic and/or faunistic information to Fauna Europaea. The vast majority of the experts are from Europe (including EU non-member states). As a unique feature, Fauna Europaea funds were set aside for rewarding/compensating for the work of taxonomic specialists and group coordinators.
To facilitate data transfer and data import, sophisticated on-line (web interfaces) and off-line (spreadsheets) data-entry routines were built, integrated within an underlying central Fauna Europaea transaction database (see Fig. 5).
A first release of the Fauna Europaea index via the web-portal has been presented on the 27th of September 2004, the most recent release (version 2.6.2) was launched on the 29th August 2013. An overview of Fauna Europaea releases can be found here: http://www.faunaeur.org/about_fauna_versions.php.
Quality control
Fauna Europaea data are unique in the sense that they are fully expert-based. Selecting leading experts for all groups assured the systematic reliability and consistency of the Fauna Europaea data.
Furthermore, all Fauna Europaea data sets are intensively reviewed at regional and thematic validation meetings, at review sessions on taxonomic symposia (for some groups), by Fauna Europaea Focal Points (during the FaEu-NAS and PESI projects) and by various end-users sending annotations using the web form at the web-portal. Additional validation on gaps and correct spelling was effected at the validation office in Paris.
In conclusion, in general we expect to get taxonomic data for 99.3% of the known European fauna. The faunistic coverage is not quite as good, but is nevertheless 90–95% of the total fauna. For the Annelida–Hirudinea (this paper) the taxonomic coverage is 100% (see Table 1), but the distribution by country is still incomplete, especially for the Branchiobdellea.
Checks on technical and logical correctness of the data have been implemented in the data entry tools, including around 50 "Taxonomic Integrity Rules". This validation tool proved to be of huge value for both the experts and project management, and contributed significantly to preparation of a remarkably clean and consistent data set. This thorough reviewing makes Fauna Europaea the most scrutinised data sets in its domain.
Step description
By evaluating team structure and life cycle procedures (data-entry, validation, updating, etc.), clear definitions of roles of users and user-groups, according to the taxonomic framework were established, including ownership and read and writes privileges, and their changes during the project life-cycle. In addition, guidelines on common data exchange formats and codes have been issued (see also the 'Guidelines for Experts' document).
Geographic coverage
Description
Species and subspecies distributions in Fauna Europaea are registered at least a country level, i.e. for political countries. For this purpose the FaEu geographical system basically follows the TDWG standards. The covered area includes the European mainland (Western Palearctic), plus the Macaronesian islands (excl. Cape Verde Islands), Cyprus, Franz Josef Land and Novaya Zemlya. Western Kazakhstan and the Caucasus are excluded (see Fig. 1).
Figure 1.
Fauna Europaea geographic coverage ('minimal Europe').
The focus is on species (or subspecies) of European animals of terrestrial and freshwater environments. Species in brackish waters, occupying the marine/freshwater or marine/terrestrial transition zones, are generally excluded.
Coordinates
Mediterranean (N 35°) and Arctic Islands (N 82°) Latitude; Atlantic Ocean (Mid-Atlantic Ridge) (W 30°) and Ural (E 60°) Longitude.
Taxonomic coverage
Description
The Fauna Europaea database contains the scientific names of all living European land and freshwater animal species, including numerous infra-groups and synonyms. More details about the conceptual background of Fauna Europaea and standards followed are described above and in the project description paper(s).
This data paper covers the Annelida–Hirudinea content of Fauna Europaea, including 9 families, 98 species, 9 subspecies and 42 (sub)species synonyms (see Fig. 2).
All species described to date are included in the current version of the data base. We may expect a future increase of species numbers for Erpobdellidae (ca 10 or even more species), and perhaps one or two species in other families, e.g. Glossiphoniidae and Piscicolidae (see Table 1). A reliable assessment of the expected number of species is not feasible at present for the Branchiobdellidae.
Taxa included
Rank | Scientific Name | Common Name |
---|---|---|
subkingdom | Eumetazoa | |
kingdom | Animalia | |
phylum | Annelida | |
class | Acanthobdellea | |
class | Branchiobdellea | |
class | Hirudinea | |
order | Acanthobdellida | |
order | Arhynchobdellida | |
order | Branchiobdellida | |
order | Rhynchobdellida | |
suborder | Erpobdelliformes | |
suborder | Hirudiniformes | |
family | Acanthobdellidae | |
family | Branchiobdellidae | |
family | Cambarincolidae | |
family | Erpobdellidae | |
family | Glossiphoniidae | |
family | Haemopidae | |
family | Hirudinidae | |
family | Piscicolidae | |
family | Xerobdellidae | |
family | Haemadipsidae | |
genus | Acanthobdella Grube 1850 | |
genus | Branchiobdella Odier 1823 | |
genus | Xironogiton Ellis 1920 | |
genus | Cambarincola Ellis 1912 | |
genus | Archaeobdella Grimm 1876 | |
genus | Barbronia R. Blanchard 1897 | |
genus | Dina R. Blanchard 1892 | |
genus | Erpobdella Blainville 1818 | |
genus | Fadejewobdella Lukin 1962 | |
genus | Trocheta Dutrochet 1817 | |
genus | Alboglossiphonia Lukin 1976 | |
genus | Batracobdella Viguier 1879 | |
genus | Batracobdelloides Oosthuizen 1984 | |
genus | Glossiphonia Johnson 1816 | |
genus | Helobdella R. Blanchard 1896 | |
genus | Hemiclepsis Vejdovsky 1884 | |
genus | Placobdella R. Blanchard 1893 | |
genus | Theromyzon Philippi 1867 | |
genus | Haemopis Savigny 1822 | |
genus | Hirudo Linnaeus 1758 | |
genus | Limnatis Moquin-Tandon 1826 | |
genus | Calliobdella Van Beneden & Hesse 1863 | |
genus | Caspiobdella Epshtein 1966 | |
genus | Croatobranchus Kozarčanin 1995 | |
genus | Cystobranchus Diesing 1859 | |
genus | Italobdella Bielecki 1993 | |
genus | Pawlowskiella Bielecki 1997 | |
genus | Piscicola Blainville 1818 | |
genus | Xerobdella von Frauenfeld 1868 | |
species | Dina absoloni Johansson 1913 | |
species | Batracobdella algira (Moquin-Tandon 1846) | |
species | Piscicola annae Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Xerobdella anulata Autrum 1958 | |
species | Dina apathyi Gedroyc 1916 | |
species | Branchiobdella astaci Odier 1823 | |
species | Branchiobdella balcanica Moszynski 1937 | |
species | Piscicola borowieci Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Piscicola brylinskae Bielecki 2001 | |
species | Trocheta bykowskii Gedroyc 1913 | |
species | Haemopis caeca Manoleli, Klemm & Sarbu 1998 | |
species | Caspiobdella caspica (Selensky 1915) | |
species | Italobdella ciosi Bielecki 1993 | |
species | Glossiphonia complanata (Linnaeus 1758) | |
species | Glossiphonia concolor (Apáthy 1888) | |
species | Placobdella costata (Fr. Müller 1846) | |
species | Trocheta cylindrica Örley 1886 | |
species | Trocheta dalmatina Sket 1968 | |
species | Piscicola elishebae Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Italobdella epshteini Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Archaeobdella esmonti Grimm 1876 | |
species | Dina eturpshem Sket 1989 | |
species | Caspiobdella fadejewi Epshtein 1961 | |
species | Trocheta falkneri Nesemann & Neubert 1996 | |
species | Cystobranchus fasciatus (Kollar 1842) | |
species | Piscicola geometra (Linnaeus 1758) | |
species | Piscicola hadzii Sket 1985 | |
species | Piscicola haranti Jarry 1960 | |
species | Trocheta haskonis Grosser 2000 | |
species | Alboglossiphonia heteroclita (Linnaeus 1761) | |
species | Branchiobdella hexodonta Grube 1888 | |
species | Alboglossiphonia hyalina (O.F. Müller 1774) | |
species | Xironogiton instabilis (Moore 1894) | |
species | Branchiobdella italica Canegallo 1928 | |
species | Piscicola jarai Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Branchiobdella kozarovi Subchev 1978 | |
species | Dina krasensis (Sket 1968) | |
species | Dina krilata Sket 1989 | |
species | Piscicola kusznierzi Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Dina kuzmani Šapkarev 1990 | |
species | Dina latestriata Neubert & Nesemann 1995 | |
species | Xerobdella lecomtei von Frauenfeld 1868 | |
species | Dina lepinja Sket & Šapkarev 1986 | |
species | Dina lineata (O.F. Müller 1774) | |
species | Dina lyhnida Šapkarev 1990 | |
species | Theromyzon maculosum (Rathke 1862) | |
species | Calliobdella mammillata (Malm 1863) | |
species | Piscicola margaritae Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Hemiclepsis marginata (O.F. Müller 1774) | |
species | Hirudo medicinalis Linnaeus 1758 | |
species | Cambarincola mesochoreus Hoffman 1963 | |
species | Erpobdella monostriata (Lindenfeld & Pietruszynski 1890) | |
species | Batracobdelloides moogi Nesemann & Csanyi 1995 | |
species | Glossiphonia nebulosa Kalbe 1964 | |
species | Piscicola niewiadomskae Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Erpobdella nigricollis (Brandes 1900) | |
species | Limnatis nilotica (Savigny 1822) | |
species | Dina ochridana Sket 1968 | |
species | Erpobdella octoculata (Linnaeus 1758) | |
species | Glossiphonia paludosa (Carena 1824) | |
species | Branchiobdella papillosa Hutter & Nesemann 2001 | |
species | Alboglossiphonia papillosa (Braun 1805) | |
species | Branchiobdella parasita (Braun 1805) | |
species | Cystobranchus pawlowskii Sket 1968 | |
species | Acanthobdella peledina Grube 1850 | |
species | Branchiobdella pentodonta Whitman 1882 | |
species | Piscicola pojmanskae Bielecki 1994 | |
species | Piscicola pomorskii Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Xerobdella praealpina Minelli 1971 | |
species | Dina profunda Šapkarev 1990 | |
species | Trocheta pseudodina Nesemann 1990 | |
species | Glossiphonia pulchella Sket 1968 | |
species | Dina punctata Johansson 1927 | |
species | Calliobdella punctata Van Beneden & Hesse 1863 | |
species | Fadejewobdella quinqueannulata (Lukin 1929) | |
species | Cystobranchus respirans (Troschel 1850) | |
species | Trocheta riparia Nesemann 1993 | |
species | Haemopis sanguisuga (Linnaeus 1758) | |
species | Glossiphonia slovaca (Kosel 1973) | |
species | Helobdella stagnalis (Linnaeus 1758) | |
species | Pawlowskiella stenosa Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Dina stschegolewi (Lukin & Epshtein 1960) | |
species | Trocheta subviridis Dutrochet 1817 | |
species | Dina svilesta Sket 1989 | |
species | Theromyzon tessulatum (O.F. Müller 1774) | |
species | Erpobdella testacea (Savigny 1820) | |
species | Helobdella triserialis (E. Blanchard 1849) | |
species | Hirudo troctina Johnson 1816 | |
species | Caspiobdella tuberculata Epshtein 1966 | |
species | Hirudo verbana Carena 1820 | |
species | Glossiphonia verrucata (Fr. Müller 1844) | |
species | Erpobdella vilnensis (Liskiewicz 1925) | |
species | Caspiobdella volgensis (Zykoff 1903) | |
species | Barbronia weberi (R. Blanchard 1897) | |
species | Piscicola wiktori Bielecki 1997 | |
species | Piscicola witkowskii Bielecki 1997 | |
subspecies | Branchiobdella balcanica balcanica Moszynski 1937 | |
subspecies | Branchiobdella balcanica sketi Karaman 1970 | |
subspecies | Glossiphonia complanata complanata (Linnaeus 1758) | |
subspecies | Glossiphonia complanata maculosa Sket 1968 | |
subspecies | Dina lineata concolor (Annandale 1913) | |
subspecies | Dina lineata dinarica Sket 1968 | |
subspecies | Dina lineata lacustris Sket 1968 | |
subspecies | Dina lineata lineata (O.F. Müller 1774) | |
subspecies | Dina lineata montana Sket 1968 | |
species | Croatobranchus mestrovi Kozarčanin 1995 |
Temporal coverage
Living time period: Currently living.
Notes
Currently living animals in stable populations, largely excluding (1) rare/irregular immigrants, intruder or invader species, (2) accidental or deliberate releases of exotic (pet) species, (3) domesticated animals, (4) foreign species imported and released for bio-control or (5) foreign species largely confined to hothouses.
Usage rights
Use license
Open Data Commons Attribution License
IP rights notes
Fauna Europaea data are licensed under CC BY SA version 4.0. The property rights of experts over their data is covered under the SMEBD conditions. For more copyrights and citation details see: http://www.faunaeur.org/copyright.php.
Data resources
Data package title
Fauna Europaea - Annelida - Hirudinea
Resource link
http://www.faunaeur.org/Data_papers/FaEu_Annelida-Hirudinea_2.6.2.zip
Alternative identifiers
Number of data sets
2
Data set 1.
Data set name
Fauna Europaea - Annelida - Hirudinea version 2.6.2 - species
Data format
CSV
Number of columns
25
Character set
UTF-8
Download URL
http://www.faunaeur.org/Data_papers/FaEu_Annelida-Hirudinea_2.6.2.zip
Description
Data set 1.
Column label | Column description |
---|---|
datasetName | The name identifying the data set from which the record was derived (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/datasetName). |
version | Release version of data set. |
versionIssued | Issue data of data set version. |
rights | Information about rights held in and over the resource (http://purl.org/dc/terms/rights). |
rightsHolder | A person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource (http://purl.org/dc/terms/rightsHolder). |
accessRights | Information about who can access the resource or an indication of its security status (http://purl.org/dc/terms/accessRights). |
taxonID | An identifier for the set of taxon information (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/taxonID) |
parentNameUsageID | An identifier for the name usage of the direct parent taxon (in a classification) of the most specific element of the scientificName (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/parentNameUsageID). |
scientificName | The full scientific name, with authorship and date information if known (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/scientificName). |
acceptedNameUsage | The full name, with authorship and date information if known, of the currently valid (zoological) taxon (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/acceptedNameUsage). |
originalNameUsage | The original combination (genus and species group names), as firstly established under the rules of the associated nomenclaturalCode (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/originalNameUsage). |
family | The full scientific name of the family in which the taxon is classified (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/family). |
familyNameId | An identifier for the family name. |
genus | The full scientific name of the genus in which the taxon is classified (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/genus). |
subgenus | The full scientific name of the subgenus in which the taxon is classified. Values include the genus to avoid homonym confusion (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/subgenus). |
specificEpithet | The name of the first or species epithet of the scientificName (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/specificEpithet). |
infraspecificEpithet | The name of the lowest or terminal infraspecific epithet of the scientificName, excluding any rank designation (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/infraspecificEpithet). |
taxonRank | The taxonomic rank of the most specific name in the scientificName (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/infraspecificEpithet). |
scientificNameAuthorship | The authorship information for the scientificName formatted according to the conventions of the applicable nomenclaturalCode (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/scientificNameAuthorship). |
authorName | Author name information |
namePublishedInYear | The four-digit year in which the scientificName was published (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/namePublishedInYear). |
Brackets | Annotation if authorship should be put between parentheses. |
nomenclaturalCode | The nomenclatural code under which the scientificName is constructed (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/nomenclaturalCode). |
taxonomicStatus | The status of the use of the scientificName as a label for a taxon (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/taxonomicStatus). |
resourceDescription | An account of this resource, including a DOI of this data-paper (http://purl.org/dc/terms/description) |
Data set 2.
Data set name
Fauna Europaea - Annelida - Hirudinea version 2.6.2 - hierarchy
Data format
CSV
Number of columns
12
Character set
UTF-8
Download URL
http://www.faunaeur.org/Data_papers/FaEu_Annelida-Hirudinea_2.6.2.zip
Description
Data set 2.
Column label | Column description |
---|---|
datasetName | The name identifying the data set from which the record was derived (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/datasetName). |
version | Release version of data set. |
versionIssued | Issue data of data set version. |
rights | Information about rights held in and over the resource (http://purl.org/dc/terms/rights). |
rightsHolder | A person or organization owning or managing rights over the resource (http://purl.org/dc/terms/rightsHolder). |
accessRights | Information about who can access the resource or an indication of its security status (http://purl.org/dc/terms/accessRights). |
taxonName | The full scientific name of the higher-level taxon |
scientificNameAuthorship | The authorship information for the scientificName formatted according to the conventions of the applicable nomenclaturalCode (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/scientificNameAuthorship). |
taxonRank | The taxonomic rank of the most specific name in the scientificName (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/infraspecificEpithet). |
taxonID | An identifier for the set of taxon information (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/taxonID) |
parentNameUsageID | An identifier for the name usage of the direct parent taxon (in a classification) of the most specific element of the scientificName (http://rs.tdwg.org/dwc/terms/parentNameUsageID). |
resourceDescription | An account of this resource, including a DOI of this data-paper (http://purl.org/dc/terms/description) |
Acknowledgements
Fauna Europaea was funded by the European Commission under the Fifth Framework Programme and contributed to the Support for Research Infrastructures work programme with Thematic Priority Biodiversity (EVR1-1999-20001) for a period of four years (1 March 2000 - 1 March 2004), including a short 'NAS extension', allowing EU candidate accession countries to participate. Follow-up support was given by the EC-FP5 EuroCAT project (EVR1-CT-2002-20011), by the EC-FP6 ENBI project (EVK2-CT-2002-20020), by the EC-FP6 EDIT project (GCE 018340), by the EC-FP7 PESI project (RI-223806) and by the EC-FP7 ViBRANT project (RI-261532). Continuing management and hosting of the Fauna Europaea services was supported by the University of Amsterdam (Zoological Museum Amsterdam) and SARA/Vancis. Recently the hosting of Fauna Europaea is taken over by the Museum für Naturkunde in Berlin, supported by the EC-FP7 EU BON project (grant agreement №308454).
Contributor Information
Alessandro Minelli, Email: alessandro.minelli@unipd.it.
Yde de Jong, Email: mail@yjong.net.
References
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