Turbellarian taxonomic database

Collecting site

Coffs Harbour, New South Wales, Australia

latitude: -30.315201     30°18'54.72"S
longitude: 153.134598     153°8'4.55"E

[Precision of location: place-name in gazetteer]
[Site Named Here by name of island, bay, strait, lake, river, or stream, etc., named in source publication]



Collected here:

Stradorhynchus caecusJul 23, 2003Coffs creek, about 150 m west of the bridge, north bank, dark silty sand and among oysters
Stradorhynchus terminalisJul 23, 2003fine sandCoffs creek, south bank, about 75 m west from the bridge, fine-grained sand and algae in a channel
Stradorhynchus terminalisJul 15, 2003about 100 m west from the bridge amongst man- groves on the north shore of the creek; sandy to silty sediment
Stradorhynchus terminalisJul 17, 2003coarse sandCampbell beach, medium coarse sand from the mid-eulittoral to the north of a projection of the beach
Nematoplana rubraSep 1993medium sandintertidal. Coffs Harbour, Arrawarra Headland
Nematoplana rubraSep 1993fine-medium sandCoffs Harbour, Jetty, high to mid-intertidal in fine to medium sand
Brunetorhynchus cannoni15 July 2003mid-littoralfine-grained sandSample taken at the low tide mark of the northern part of Park Beach
Brunetorhynchus cannoni23 July 2013littoraldark silty sand from mangroves150 m west of bridge at the north bank





for site by site name (or site # or start+number)
[enter site names separated by spaces or commas;
e.g., 'carolina,beaufort' shows sites with BOTH Carolina and Beaufort in the site name;
e.g., 'reef austral liz' shows sites with Australia AND Reef AND Lizard in the site name]

for site by digital coordinates (as in '41.19 16.60' or '-27.900 153.283340')
[separate the two with one or more spaces]
latitudelongitudeexact within 0.2 degrees

for site by proximity
latitudelongitude (enter coordinates for the center of the search area (e.g., 16.4/-88.1 or 16°57'36.95"N / 88°2'11.84"W ). Search is to within 1 degree.




taxon:

Home page -- (Main hierarchy)



taxon:

Home page -- (Main hierarchy)