Descriptions and illustrations are presented for attached benthic marine algae considered new to the Netherlands, viz. Hincksia fuscata var. uber and Striaria attenuata. The former taxon was extensively described by Kuckuck in 1961 as Giffordia fuscata var. uber. The new combination was necessary because the generic name Giffordia has been superseded by Hincksia
During the detailed study of the algal vegetation of the Zeebrugge pier in 1977-78, 45 taxa were ide...
Fig. 5. Hincksina flustroides (Hincks, 1877) (MHNUSC-Bry 617), Cíes Islands (Galicia, NW Spain). A. ...
Algological studies were carried out in a quivering bog in the marshy region of N.W. Overijssel, mic...
The first occurrence in the Netherlands is reported of Hincksia hincksiae, H. intermedia, Herponema ...
A list of the multicellular marine algae found along the coast of the Netherlands is given, the firs...
Little attention has been paid till now to the algae, transported to the Netherlands coast on drifti...
The earliest account of the Netherlands’ Algae appeared in 1781 in D. de Gorter, Flora VII Prov. Bel...
Iberian material originally identified as Hincksina flustroides is revised and five different specie...
First records for the Netherlands are reported of the brown algae Botrytella reinboldii, Feldmannia ...
In most Dutch scientific and popular books dealing with Polychaeta, the common amphictenid of the Du...
The genus Stichothamnion (Rhodomelaceae) was described by Borgesen in 1930, on the basis of material...
The collections of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie at Leiden and the Zoologisch Museum of A...
In pre-linnean times A. van Royen named several species of algae in his Florae Leydensis Prodromus (...
The collections of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie at Leiden and the Zoologisch Museum of A...
Four species considered to be newly found drifting ashore are described and illustrated: Sargassum n...
During the detailed study of the algal vegetation of the Zeebrugge pier in 1977-78, 45 taxa were ide...
Fig. 5. Hincksina flustroides (Hincks, 1877) (MHNUSC-Bry 617), Cíes Islands (Galicia, NW Spain). A. ...
Algological studies were carried out in a quivering bog in the marshy region of N.W. Overijssel, mic...
The first occurrence in the Netherlands is reported of Hincksia hincksiae, H. intermedia, Herponema ...
A list of the multicellular marine algae found along the coast of the Netherlands is given, the firs...
Little attention has been paid till now to the algae, transported to the Netherlands coast on drifti...
The earliest account of the Netherlands’ Algae appeared in 1781 in D. de Gorter, Flora VII Prov. Bel...
Iberian material originally identified as Hincksina flustroides is revised and five different specie...
First records for the Netherlands are reported of the brown algae Botrytella reinboldii, Feldmannia ...
In most Dutch scientific and popular books dealing with Polychaeta, the common amphictenid of the Du...
The genus Stichothamnion (Rhodomelaceae) was described by Borgesen in 1930, on the basis of material...
The collections of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie at Leiden and the Zoologisch Museum of A...
In pre-linnean times A. van Royen named several species of algae in his Florae Leydensis Prodromus (...
The collections of the Rijksmuseum van Natuurlijke Historie at Leiden and the Zoologisch Museum of A...
Four species considered to be newly found drifting ashore are described and illustrated: Sargassum n...
During the detailed study of the algal vegetation of the Zeebrugge pier in 1977-78, 45 taxa were ide...
Fig. 5. Hincksina flustroides (Hincks, 1877) (MHNUSC-Bry 617), Cíes Islands (Galicia, NW Spain). A. ...
Algological studies were carried out in a quivering bog in the marshy region of N.W. Overijssel, mic...