Euperipatoides kanangrensis | |
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Euperipatoides kanangrensis pacing along on a eucalyptus log in which it normally resides in Australia | |
Scientific classification
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Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Onychophora |
Family: | Peripatopsidae |
Genus: | Euperipatoides |
Species: | E. kanangrensis
|
Binomial name | |
Euperipatoides kanangrensis (
Reid, 1996)
|
Euperipatoides kanangrensis is a species of velvet worm of the Peripatopsidae family, described in 1996 from specimens collected in Kanangra-Boyd National Park, New South Wales. This species has 15 pairs of legs in both sexes. [1] It is endemic to Australia. The embryonic development of Euperipatoides kanangrensis has been described. [2] [3] This species is viviparous. [4] This species is used as model organism for the last common ancestor of the Panarthropoda. It resembles fossil Cambrian lobopodians. [5]
Media related to
Euperipatoides kanangrensis at Wikimedia Commons
Euperipatoides kanangrensis | |
---|---|
![]() | |
Euperipatoides kanangrensis pacing along on a eucalyptus log in which it normally resides in Australia | |
Scientific classification
![]() | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Onychophora |
Family: | Peripatopsidae |
Genus: | Euperipatoides |
Species: | E. kanangrensis
|
Binomial name | |
Euperipatoides kanangrensis (
Reid, 1996)
|
Euperipatoides kanangrensis is a species of velvet worm of the Peripatopsidae family, described in 1996 from specimens collected in Kanangra-Boyd National Park, New South Wales. This species has 15 pairs of legs in both sexes. [1] It is endemic to Australia. The embryonic development of Euperipatoides kanangrensis has been described. [2] [3] This species is viviparous. [4] This species is used as model organism for the last common ancestor of the Panarthropoda. It resembles fossil Cambrian lobopodians. [5]
Media related to
Euperipatoides kanangrensis at Wikimedia Commons