References Used for Species of Megacalanidae
 
Sort by : RefNo Author Year
[ n = 9 ] 
RefNo
 Description
Bisby, F.A., M.A. Ruggiero, K.L. Wilson, M. Cachuela-Palacio, S.W. Kimani, Y.R. Roskov, A. Soulier-Perkins and J. van Hertum, 2005 Species 2000 & ITIS Catalogue of Life: 2005 Annual Checklist. CD-ROM; Species 2000: Reading, U.K.
Childress, J.J. and M. Nygaard, 1974 Chemical composition and buoyancy of midwater crustaceans as function ofdepth of occurrence off Southern California. Marine Biology 27:225-238.
Hogg, O.T., D.K.A. Barnes and H.J. Griffiths, 2011 Highly diverse, poorly studied and uniquely threatened by climate change: an assessment of marine biodiversity on South Georgia's continental shelf. PLoS ONE 6(5):e19795.
Ikeda, T., A. Yamaguchi and T. Matsuishi, 2006 Chemical composition and energy content of deep-sea calanoid copepods in the Western North Pacific Ocean. Deep Sea Research I 53:1791-1809.
MarineSpecies.org, 2050 MarineSpecies.org. http://www.marinespecies.org/index.php
Morris, M.J. and T.L. Hopkins, 1983 Biochemical composition of crustacean zooplankton from the eastern Gulf of Mexico. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 69:1-19.
Ruppert, E.E., R.S. Fox and R.D. Barnes, 2004 Invertebrate Zoology. A functional evolutionary approach. 7th Ed. Brooks/Cole, Thomson Learning learning, Inc. 990 p.
Smithsonian Institution, 2016 Megacalanus princeps Wolfenden, 1904. http://collections.si.edu/search/results.htm?q=Megacalanus%09princeps [Accessed 17/10/2016].
Suarez-Morales, E., J.W. Fleeger and P.A. Montagna, 2009 Free-living Copepoda (Crustacea) of the Gulf of Mexico. pp. 841-869 In Felder, D.L.; Camp, D.K. (eds.) Gulf of Mexico - Origins, Waters, and Biota. Biodiversity. Texas A&M University Press, College Station, Texas.