Abstract

Horton, Tammy, Claude De Broyer, Denise Bellan-Santini, Charles Oliver Coleman, Denis Copilaș-Ciocianu, Laure Corbari, Mikhail E. Daneliya, Jean-Claude Dauvin, Wim Decock, Lucia Fanini, Cene Fišer, Rebeca Gasca, Michal Grabowski, José M. Guerra-García, Ed A. Hendrycks, Lauren Elizabeth Hughes, Damia Jaume, Young-Hyo Kim, Rachael A. King, Sabrina Lo Brutto, Anne-Nina Lörz, Tomasz Mamos, Cristiana S. Serejo, André R. Senna, Jesser F. Souza-Filho, Anne Helene S. Tandberg, Michael H. Thurston, Wim Vader, Risto Väinölä, Georgina Valls Domedel, Leen Vandepitte, Bart Vanhoorne, Ronald Vonk, Kristine N. White, and Wolfgang Zeidler. 2023. The World Amphipoda Database: history and progress. In Festschrift in Honour of James K. Lowry, ed. P. B. Berents, S. T. Ahyong, A. A. Myers, and L. Fanini. Records of the Australian Museum 75(4): 329–342.

We provide an overview of the World Amphipoda Database (WAD), a global species database that is part of the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS). Launched in 2013, the database contains entries for over 10,500 accepted species names. Edited currently by 31 amphipod taxonomists, following WoRMS priorities, the WAD has at least one editor per major group. All accepted species are checked by the editors, as is the authorship available for all of the names. The higher classification is documented for every species and a type species is recorded for every genus name. This constitutes five of the 13 priorities for completion, set by WoRMS. In 2015, five LifeWatch grants were allocated for WAD activities. These included a general training workshop in 2016, together with data input for the superfamily Lysianassoidea and for a number of non-marine groups. Philanthropy grants in 2019 and 2021 covered more important gaps across the whole group. Further work remains to complete the linking of unaccepted names, original descriptions, and environmental information. Once these tasks are completed, the database will be considered complete for 8 of the 13 priorities, and efforts will continue to input new taxa annually and focus on the remaining priorities, particularly the input of type localities. We give an overview of the current status of the order Amphipoda, providing counts of the number of genera and species within each family belonging to the six suborders currently recognized.

 
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Bibliographic Data

Short Form
Horton et al., 2023. Rec. Aust. Mus. 75(4): 329–342
Author
Tammy Horton; et al.
Year
2023
Title
The World Amphipoda Database: history and progress
Serial Title
Records of the Australian Museum
Volume
75
Issue
4
Start Page
329
End Page
342
DOI
10.3853/j.2201-4349.75.2023.1875
Language
en
Date Published
06 December 2023
Cover Date
06 December 2023
ISSN (online)
2201-4349
ISSN (print)
0067-1975
CODEN
RAUMAJ
Publisher
The Australian Museum
Place Published
Sydney, Australia
Subjects
CRUSTACEA: AMPHIPODA; BIOGEOGRAPHY; CHECKLIST
Digitized
06 December 2023
Available Online
06 December 2023
Reference Number
1875
EndNote
1875.enw
Title Page
1875.pdf
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Complete Work
1875_complete.pdf
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