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Systematics and position of Nephrops among the lobsters
Tshudy, D. (2013). Systematics and position of Nephrops among the lobsters, in: Johnson, M.L. et al. Adv. Mar. Biol. 64: The ecology and biology of Nephrops norvegicus. Advances in Marine Biology, 64: pp. 1–25. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/B978-0-12-410466-2.00001-7
In: Johnson, M.L.; Johnson, M.P. (Ed.) (2013). Adv. Mar. Biol. 64: The ecology and biology of Nephrops norvegicus. Advances in Marine Biology, 64. Academic Press: London. ISBN 978-0-12-410466-2. XXV, 325 pp., more
In: Advances in Marine Biology. Academic Press: London, New York. ISSN 0065-2881; e-ISSN 2162-5875, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keywords
    Norway lobsters
    Metanephrops Jenkins, 1972 [WoRMS]; Nephropidae Dana, 1852 [WoRMS]; Nephrops norvegicus (Linnaeus, 1758) [WoRMS]; Palaeonephrops; Paraclytia
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Metanephrops; Paraclytia; Palaeonephrops

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  • Tshudy, D.

Abstract
    This chapter presents and explains the position of Nephrops norvegicus in the classification of lobsters. Covered, in order, are systematic classification of, taxonomic history of Nephrops, and analysis of Nephrops in nephropid phylogeny.The genus Nephrops was erected by Leach in 1814 and has a long and interesting taxonomic history. Prior to 1972, Nephrops was known by 14 Recent species. All but one of these, N. norvegicus, were removed to a new genus,Metanephrops, by Jenkins (1972). Today, N. norvegicus is still the only known living representative of the genus.Similarly, Nephrops is known by only one fossil species, the Miocene Nephrops kvistgaardae, although several other fossil species have been previously referred to this genus.Nephrops, along with the other familiar and commercially important marine clawed lobsters, is referred to Family Nephropidae, one of 17 marine clawed lobster families arrayed in 3 infraorders, 6 families each in the Astacidea and Glypheidea and 5 in the Polychelida. Infraorder Astacidea includes the Superfamily Nephropoidea, as well as the lesser known ‘reef lobsters’ of the Superfamily Enoplometopoidea, and the freshwater crayfish, Superfamily Astacoidea. In phylogenetic analyses, the freshwater crayfish form a sister group to the Nephropoidea. It is interpreted that freshwater crayfish evolved from nephropoid lobsters, but from which lobster group is uncertain.The taxonomic placement of N. norvegicus is stable at all levels, from species on up. Despite that, the phylogenetic relationships of Nephrops to other nephropid genera are unsettled due to conflicting results in morphological and molecular analyses. Currently, new morphological characters and new genes are being analysed in the hope of elucidating nephropid phylogeny.

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