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NABSLinks - Invertebrates

Email the NABS Link webmaster to suggest a new link or indicate a correction.

  • Crayfish Homepage (909)
    Maintained by the Monte L. Bean Life Science Museum at Brigham Young University, the Crayfish Homepage provides information on Crayfish identification, phylogeny, species lists, conservation, bibliography, and photographs.
  • theWaterFlea: the cladoceran web site (460)
    An introduction to the cladocera. A source of information for anyone interested in lake ecology or palaeolimnology, and a training tool for those who want to learn the art of cladoceran analysis for palaeolimnological investigations. Sections within the site include general cladoceran biology, taxonomy and lab protoccols.

Acari

Annelida

Arachnida

Araneae

Crustacea

Hymenoptera

  • Bee Alert (306)
  • Formis (287)
    FORMIS 2001 is a composite of several ant literature databases. It contains citations for a large fraction of the world's ant literature (about 30,000 references). This database is designed to allow convenient searches of titles, keywords and abstracts when available. Citations from this database can be exported to create specialty databases or personal reprint indexes. FORMIS was last updated in 2001.
  • Myrmecology (266)

Lepidoptera

Mollusca

  • Florida Museum of Natural History Malacology Collection (294)
  • Freshwater Gastropods of North America (523)
    A long-term collaborative effort to monograph all 15 families of freshwater snails inhabiting the continent north of Mexico.
  • Freshwater Mussels of the Midwest (466)
    Electronic version of the field guide by Kevin Cummings and Christine Mayer. The guide contains an introduction to mussels (biology and economic importance), a brief summary of the conservation status of mussels, a glossary of terms, and a simple key to freshwater bivalves. The heart of the site, however, is the species accounts section, covering the subfamilies Cumberlandinae, Ambleminae, Anodontinae, and Lampsilinae. Each species account includes a color photograph and physical description, key characteristics, a description of habitat requirements and conservation status, and a black-and-white map of the species' distribution in the Midwest. Of added utility are the links (where applicable) pointing to similar-looking species. (From the Scout Report for Science and Engineering, Copyright Internet Scout Project 1994-1998. http://scout.cs.wisc.edu/)
  • Illinois Natural History Survey Mollusk Collection (329)
    The Illinois Natural History Survey Mollusk Collection contains over 105,400 catalogued specimens, most of which were collected in Illinois and the southeastern United States. The collection is 90% freshwater species (mussels, fingernail clams, and snails) and 10% terrestrial species (snails). Most of the specimens were collected as a result of various faunal surveys conducted by INHS biologists from the late 1800's until the present.
  • Mollusca (468)
  • Mollusks Bibliography - Non-marine (338)
    The Scaphopod Page
  • North Carolina Freshwater Mussels (369)
    North Carolina is home to more than 60 species of freshwater mussels. Unfortunately, 50% of these species are designated Endangered, Threatened, or Special Concern within the state. The Nongame and Endangered Wildlife Program strives to prevent species from becoming endangered through maintaining viable, self-sustaining populations of native wildlife, with an emphasis on species in decline. Site includes: Species Information and Status; Species Identification Key; Life History of Freshwater Mussels; Shell Anatomy; Glossary and References.
  • Veliger Larva Home Page (332)

Nematoda

Orthoptera

Scorpiones

Siphonaptera