183,003 research outputs found
Bellorchestia richardsoni Serejo & Lowry 2008
Bellorchestia richardsoni Serejo & Lowry, 2008 Bellorchestia richardsoni Serejo & Lowry, 2008: 170, figs 5–8.― Lowry & Springthorpe, 2009: 899. Material examined. New South Wales. 10 specimens, AM, Ulladulla, New South Wales, Australia (~ 35°21’S 150°28’E), under seaweed, K. Sheard, 6 November 1944; 10 specimens, AM P.85745–P.85747, South Moruya Head (35°54'52"S 150°09'25"E) on sand under weed on exposed beach, high tide mark, M. Miller, J. K. Lowry, J. H. Peart & R. A. Peart, 22 September 2002 (NSW 1982); female, 13 mm, AM P.26538, Spencer Park, Merimbula, New South Wales, Australia (36°53’30”S 149°55’E), upper intertidal under pebbles and sand, J.H. Day et al., 15 March 1976 (MER 359); 1 specimen, AM P.26533, Spencer Park, Merimbula, New South Wales, Australia (36°53’30”S 149°55’E) under Zostera, J.H. Day et al. 2 December 1975 (MER 316); male, 15 mm, AM P26518, north bank, Lake Merimbula, New South Wales, Australia (36°53’42”S 149°54’30”E), intertidal under drift weed, J.H. Day et al., 3 December 1975 (MER 308); 12 males and females, AM P.85743, Aslings Beach, north side of Twofold Bay, New South Wales, Australia (37°02.98’S 149°55.09’E), under weed, high tide mark, M. Miller, J. K. Lowry, J. H. Peart & R. A. Peart, 21 September 2002 (NSW 1977); many specimens, AM P.85743, Aslings Beach, north side of Twofold Bay, New South Wales, Australia (37°02.98’S 149°55.09’E), under weed on sand, high tide mark, M. Miller, J. K. Lowry, J. H. Peart & R. A. Peart, 21 September 2002 (NSW 1978); 14 specimens, AM P.85876, Cocora Beach, Eden, New South Wales (37°04’24.6”S 149°53’45.4”E), 1430, under Cystophora in supralittoral zone, 29 April 2011, J.K. Lowry & A. Lodge, preserved in 95% ETOH (MI NSW 3686); 2 specimens, AM P.85748, P85749, Nullica Beach, Twofold Bay (37°06' S 149°52'30" E) under beach wrack, 26 November 1988 (NSW 1623). Victoria. Male, 16 mm, AM P.85974, near boat ramp, Betka Beach, Mallacoota, Victoria, Australia (37°34.36’S 149°45.73’E), under seaweed on sand, 21 September 2002, J.K. Lowry, R. Peart, M. Millar & J. Peart (Vic-119); 12 specimens, AM P.85874, AM P.85882–P.85886, Betka Beach, Mallacoota, Victoria (37°35’10.6”S 149°44’13.1”E), 0815, under Cystophora and Ecklonia in supralittoral zone, 29 April 2011, J.K. Lowry & A. Lodge, preserved in 95% ETOH (MI VIC 138 (stn 1); 10 specimens, AM P.85875, AM P.85887–P.85891, Point Ricardo, Victoria (37°48’27.2”S 148°37’59.9”E), 1130, under Cystophora in supralittoral zone, 29 April 2011, J.K. Lowry & A. Lodge, preserved in 95% ETOH (MI VIC 139 (stn 2); 4 specimens, AM P.69242, Woodside Beach (between Sale and Yarram), Victoria (38°33’17”S 146°58’28”E), under Sargassum in supralittoral zone, 9 October 2003, C.S. Serejo & J.K. Lowry (Vic 123). Remarks. In Serejo & Lowry (2008) only the type locality (Point Ricardo, Victoria) was reported. Here the distribution is extended northwards from Point Ricardo on the south-eastern Victorian coast northwards to Ulladulla on the New South Wales coast. North of Ulladulla B. richardsoni is replaced by B. mariae. Distribution. New South Wales: Aslings Beach, Nullica Bay Beach, Twofold Bay; South Moruya Head; Ulladulla; Spenser Park, Merimbula (all current study). Victoria: Betka Beach, Mallacoota; Point Ricardo (Serejo & Lowry 2008).Published as part of Lowry, J. K., 2012, Talitrid amphipods from ocean beaches along the New South Wales coast of Australia (Amphipoda, Talitridae), pp. 1-26 in Zootaxa 3575 on page
[Letter from M. W. Lowry to Odelia R. Staiti - May 3, 1940]
Letter from attorney M. W. Lowry to her client Odelia R. Staiti concerning tax matters involving individual or individuals named Fewett
Lowry, R S, 402663
This record was harvested from a previous catalogue system and will be withdrawn in 2025. Information in this record may be superseded or incomplete. Visit this record in UMA's new catalogue at: https://archives.library.unimelb.edu.au/nodes/view/400204Surname: LOWRY. Given Name(s) or Initials: R S. Military Service Number or Last Known Location: 402663. Missing, Wounded and Prisoner of War Enquiry Card Index Number: 8223.218475
Item: [2016.0049.32497] "Lowry, R S, 402663
Australorchestia Serejo & Lowry 2008
Australorchestia Serejo & Lowry, 2008 Australorchestia Serejo & Lowry, 2008: 163. Type species. Australorchestia occidentalis Serejo & Lowry, 2008, original designation. Included species. Australorchestia includes 2 species: A. occidentalis Serejo & Lowry, 2008; A. tantabiddyensis sp. nov. Diagnostic description (based on male). Head Eyes medium (greater than 1 / 5 to 1 / 3 head length). Antenna 1 short, not longer than article 4 of antenna 2 peduncle. Antenna 2 peduncular articles slender to slightly incrassate ; peduncular article 3 without ventral process; final flagellar article large, cone-shaped, forming virgula divina. Mandible left lacinia mobilis 4- 5 -dentate . Maxilliped palp article 2 distomedial lobe well developed; article 4 reduced, button-shaped. Gnathopod 1 chelate; posterior margin of carpus and propodus each with lobe covered in palmate setae . Gnathopod 2 subchelate; merus and carpus free; dactylus attenuated distally. Pereopods 3–7 cuspidactylate. Pereopods 5–7 without setae along posterior margin of dactylus. Pereopods 6–7 not sexually dimorphic; without row of short setae along posterior margin of dactyli. Pleonites 1–3 without dorsal spines. Pleopods all well developed, biramous . Epimera 1–3 without vertical slits. Uropod 1 rami without apical pear-shaped setae; outer ramus slender, with marginal robust setae. Uropod 3 well developed; ramus subequal in length to peduncle. Telson apically incised, as broad as long or longer than broad with 5–6 robust setae per lobe. Remarks. In the original description of Australorchestia occidentalis the male antenna 2 is considered to be slightly incrassate, the left lacinia mobilis has 4 cusps, the male gnathopod 1 is considered as subchelate and the male pereopod 7 is considered to be slightly expanded. In the new species, A. tantabiddyensis, male antenna 2 is slender to slightly incrassate, the left lacinia mobilis has 5 cusps, in the male gnathopod 1 the palm of the propodus is acute but then forms a sharp angle to become obtuse so that the gnathopod is considered as chelate, and the pereopod 7 has the merus and propodus slightly expanded as in A. occidentalis. The generic diagnosis has been amended to document these changes. The relationship of Australorchestia to other talitrid genera is unclear. The obtuse palm on gnathopod 1 is unusual among talitrids. Australorchestia is most similar to Africorchestia Lowry & Coleman, 2011. Both genera have a reduced, button-shaped maxillipedal palp article 4, palmate lobes on the carpus and propodus of male gnathopod 2, well developed pleopods, robust setae on the outer ramus of uropod 1 and 5–10 robust setae per lobe on the telson. They differ in the chelation of gnathopod 1, the distal shape of the dactylus of male gnathopod 2, the sexual dimorphism of pereopods 6 and 7 and the condition of the dorsum of pleonites 1–3. Both genera are considered to be post-Gondwanan.Published as part of Lowry, J. K. & Springthorpe, R. T., 2015, Coastal Talitridae (Amphipoda: Talitroidea) from north-western Australia to Darwin with a revision of the genus Cochinorchestia Lowry & Peart, 2010, pp. 151-202 in Zootaxa 3985 (2) on pages 154-155, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3985.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23516
Cyphocaris tunicola Lowry & Stoddart 1997
Cyphocaris tunicola Lowry & Stoddart, 1997 Cyphocaris tunicola Lowry & Stoddart, 1997: 36, figs 14–16.— Escobar-Briones & Winfield, 2003: 40. Type material. Holotype female, 13 mm, ovigerous, USNM 282680; paratype male, USNM 282681, north-eastern Gulf of Mexico (27 °00'N 84 ° 57 'W), 200–500 m over bottom depth of 677 m, associated with tunicate colony, 1 -m closing net, 21 March 1988, 0 212 hours, R/V Suncoaster, MARFIN Geryon deep-water plankton collections; paratype, male, 11.6 mm, USNM 282682; 4 paratypes, USNM 282683; 4 paratypes, AM P. 45330; 2 paratypes, GCRL 1343, north-eastern Gulf of Mexico (27 ° 54 'N 85 ° 16 'W), 200–400 m over bottom depth of 494 m, 1 -m closing net, 25 February 1988, 2219 hours, R/V Suncoaster, MARFIN Geryon deep-water plankton collections. Type locality. North-eastern Gulf of Mexico (27 °00'N 84 ° 57 'W). Depth range. 200– 500 m. Distribution. North-eastern Gulf of Mexico (Lowry & Stoddart 1997).Published as part of Hughes, Lauren E. & Lowry, James K., 2015, A review of the world Cyphocarididae with description of three new species (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Lysianassoidea), pp. 1-40 in Zootaxa 4058 (1) on page 31, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4058.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23552
An exploration of the outsider's role in selected works by Joseph Conrad, Malcolm Lowry, V.S. Naipaul.
PhDThis thesis explores ways in which the outsider questions rather than confirms
dominant cultural values whilst avoiding the crudity of overt politicisation. I argue
that the outsider's preference for an observer's stance is not so much an act which
denies responsibility to the world of his day, but rather a means of reassessing its
priorities.
In Section One, I discuss Conrad's role as an outsider in the age of Empires. I
demonstrate the ways in which Conrad employs narrators, frequently using strategies
of irony which can be and have been read in very different ways. I argue that Conrad
uses irony as a tool for condemnation rather than condonement of imperialist practice,
if not its ideology.
In Section Two, I discuss Lowry as an emigre from England (so contrasting
him with Conrad, the immigrant from Europe), and examine his dissenting voice
which opposes bourgeois prejudice against the working class, a totalising ideology
like Fascism, and a Western rationalism which sees too rigid a distinction between
sanity and madness. I demonstrate how Lowry as an outsider reacts to the age of
twentieth century World Wars.
In Section Three, I discuss Naipaul's role as an outsider in the age of
decolonisation, when bogus liberals and false redeemers fail to rebuild the newly
independent post-colonial states. As in Conrad's case, I show how a failure to read
Naipaul's ironic tone of voice has given rise to radically divergent views as to what he
is about. I also link Conrad and Naipaul through their cultural negotiation between the
'centre' and its peripheries.
By looking at these three writers in chronological order and offering a
comparative perspective on their work, I highlight the outsider's disturbing, yet
illuminating role within a historical context. I also draw attention to creative tensions
between artistic concerns and a serious political purpose. I assess the outsider as
observer and man of conscience rather than as a` mere onlooker. I conclude that the
outsider also fulfils a social obligation by promoting critical awareness on the reader's
side by means of his defamiliarising perspective
Cecelia McKie Scrapbook Collection
Copy of letter sent from Cecelia McKie to 'Mrs. W. R. Lowry', of Columbus, Ohio, regarding Santo Tomas Internment Camp internee 'William L. Sloane (?) (Lowry)'. Letter contains transcribed message broadcast from internee on Radio Tokyo
Nagada uwedoae Lowry & Stoddart 1995
<i>Nagada uwedoae</i> Lowry & Stoddart, 1995 <p> <i>Nagada uwedoae</i> Lowry & Stoddart, 1995: 154, figs 34–36. –– Lowry & Stoddart, 2003: 283 (catalogue).— Lowry & Stoddart, 2009: 914, figs 5, 6.</p> <p> <b>Types.</b> Holotype, female, 3.6 mm, AM P.41605. Paratypes: 108 specimens, AM P.41606; 79 specimens, AM P.41609; 60 specimens, USNM 274112; 33 specimens, BMNH 1995.592.624; 1 make, AM P.41607; 288 specimens, AM P.41608.</p> <p> <b>Type locality.</b> Face of outer barrier between Dam Awan (Rasch Passage) and Wongad, Astrolabe Bay, Papua New Guinea (5°08.59’S 145°49.65’E), 290 m depth.</p> <p> <b>Additional material examined.</b> <i>New South Wales.</i> 4 specimens, AM P.50752, north-east of Coffs Harbour (30°15.93’S 153°21.9’E), 100 m, baited trap, 8–9 September 1994, J.K. Lowry & K. Dempsey, MV <i>Carrie Ann</i> [NSW-985]; 3 specimens, AM P.50750, north-east of Coffs Harbour (30°15.93’S 153°21.9’E), 100 m, <i>Globigerina</i> ooze, baited trap, 8–9 September 1994, J.K. Lowry & K. Dempsey, MV <i>Carrie Ann</i> [NSW-984]; 2 specimens, AM P.51132, north-east of Coffs Harbour (30°14.63'S 153°27.68'E), 199 m, baited trap, 12–13 August 1993, P.B. Berents, R. T. Springthorpe & W. Vader, MV <i>Cheryl Lee</i> [NSW-882]; 1 female, AM P.69473, Wattamolla, off Providential Head (34°08'S 151°08.5'E), 59 m, baited trap, 14–15 January 1991, S.J. Keable, A. R. Parker & J.K. Lowry, MV <i>Krista</i> [PIO-110].</p> <p> <i>Tasmania.</i> 10 specimens, AM P.58313; 6 specimens, AM P.51099, east of Fortescue Bay (43°06.7’S 148°13.6’E), 200 m, baited trap, 16–17 April 1993, J.K. Lowry & P. Freewater, MV <i>Tasmanian Enterprise</i> [TAS-357]; 19 specimens, AM P.51104; 16 specimens, AM P.58317, east of Fortescue Bay (43°06.7’S 148°13.6’E), 200 m, baited trap, 17–18 April 1993, J.K. Lowry & P. Freewater, MV <i>Tasmanian Enterprise</i> [TAS-376 & TAS-374]; 1 specimen, AM P.51100; 10 specimens, AM P.51101, east of Fortescue Bay (43°09.37’S 148°13.6’E), 300 m, baited trap, 16–17 April 1993, J.K. Lowry & P. Freewater, MV <i>Tasmanian Enterprise</i> [TAS-359 & TAS-361]; 7 specimens, AM P.51092, east of Fortescue Bay (43°09.37’S 148°13.6’E), 300 m, baited trap, 8–9 April 1994, J.K. Lowry & K. Dempsey, MV <i>Martrudan</i> [TAS-395]; 2 specimens, AM P.51105, east of Fortescue Bay (43°07.37’S 148°13.75’E), 400 m, baited trap, 17–18 April 1993, J.K. Lowry & P. Freewater, MV <i>Tasmanian Enterprise</i> [TAS-380]; 1 specimen, AM P.57716, east of Fortescue Bay (43°08.97'S 148°15.37'E), 1000 m, baited trap, 9–10 April 1994, J.K. Lowry & K. Dempsey, MV <i>Martrudan</i> [TAS-421]; 3 specimens, AM P.51103; 13 specimens, AM P.51102, east of Fortescue Bay, north of Hippolyte Rocks (43°06.7'S 148°03.45'E), 100 m, baited trap, 17–18 April 1993, J.K. Lowry & P. Freewater, MV <i>Tasmanian Enterprise</i> [TAS-372 & TAS-371].</p> <p> <b>Habitat.</b> Marine soft bottoms.</p> <p> <b>Depth range.</b> 59–1000 m (this study).</p> <p> <b>Feeding strategies.</b> Ascavenger taken in baited traps.</p> <p> <b>Distribution</b>. <i>Papua New Guinea.</i> Madang Lagoon and Astrolabe Bay (Lowry & Stoddart 1995). <i>Australia.</i> East coast from Queensland to Tasmania (Lowry & Stoddart 2009, this study).</p>Published as part of <i>Lowry, J. K. & Kilgallen, N. M., 2014, A generic review of the lysianassoid family Uristidae and descriptions of new taxa from Australian waters (Crustacea, Amphipoda, Uristidae), pp. 1-92 in Zootaxa 3867 (1)</i> on pages 44-45, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3867.1.1, <a href="http://zenodo.org/record/5585734">http://zenodo.org/record/5585734</a>
Tropicorchestia Lowry & Springthorpe, 2015, gen. nov.
Tropicorchestia gen. nov. Type species. Tropicorchestia derbyensis gen. nov., sp. nov. Included species. Marsh-hopper. Tropicorchestia includes two species: T. derbyensis sp. nov.; T. glasbyi sp. nov. Etymology. The name refers to its geographic location in tropical Australia. Diagnostic description (based on male). Eyes medium (greater than 1 / 5 to 1 / 3 head length). Antenna 1 short, slightly longer than article 4 of antenna 2 peduncle. Antenna 2 peduncular articles slender; peduncular article 3 without ventral process; final flagellar article large, cone-shaped, forming virgula divina. Mandible left lacinia mobilis 4 -dentate. Maxilliped palp article 2 distomedial lobe well developed; article 4 reduced, button-shaped. Gnathopod 1 subchelate ; posterior margin of merus, carpus and propodus each with lobe covered in palmate setae. Gnathopod 2 subchelate ; merus and carpus free; dactylus attenuated distally. Pereopods 3–7 cuspidactylate. Pereopods 5–7 without setae along posterior margin of the dactylus. Pereopods 6–7 not sexually dimorphic, without row of short setae along posterior margin of dactyli. Pleonites 1–3 without dorsal spines. Pleopods all well developed . Epimera without slits just above ventral margins. Uropod 1 rami without apical spear-shaped setae; outer ramus slender; without marginal robust setae. Uropod 3 well developed; ramus shorter than peduncle. Telson entire, with 3–6 robust setae per lobe. Remarks. The Indo West Pacific genera Tropicorchestia gen. nov., Floresorchestia Bousfield, 1984 and Lanorchestia Miyamoto & Morino, 2010 appear to be very similar. They share nearly all generic-level characters (Lowry & Bopiah 2012). Floresorchestia differs from Tropicorchestia and Lanorchestia in having epimeral slits. Lanorchestia differs from Floresorchestia and Tropicorchestia in having long first antennae and slightly shortened third pleopods.Published as part of Lowry, J. K. & Springthorpe, R. T., 2015, Coastal Talitridae (Amphipoda: Talitroidea) from north-western Australia to Darwin with a revision of the genus Cochinorchestia Lowry & Peart, 2010, pp. 151-202 in Zootaxa 3985 (2) on pages 190-191, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3985.2.1, http://zenodo.org/record/23516
Dulichiella pacifica Lowry & Springthorpe 2005
Dulichiella pacifica Lowry & Springthorpe, 2005 (Figs 2, 3) Dulichiella appendiculata. –– Berents, 1983: 111, fig. 9. –– Ledoyer, 1984: 64. –– Ledoyer, 1986: 187, fig. 9 N Cal. Dulichiella pacifica. –– Lowry & Springthorpe, 2005: 292, figs 54–57. –– Lowry & Springthorpe, 2007: 40, figs 30–32. Material examined. 1 specimen, AM P30123 (75 LIZ D-1); 6 specimens, AM P30124 (QLD 2); 1 specimen, AM P77738 (QLD 21); 5 specimens, AM P30125 (QLD 27); 2 specimens, AM P30126 (QLD 28); 1 specimen, AM P77739 (QLD 57); 1 specimen, AM P70836 (QLD 1661); 1 specimen, AM P70920 (QLD 1682); 2 specimens, AM P70921 (QLD 1686); 1 specimen, AM P70916 (QLD 1691); 6 specimens, AM P70946 (QLD 1696); 1 specimen, AM P71005 (QLD 1707); 2 specimens, AM P71950 (QLD 1707); 1 female, 6.1 mm, AM P75510 (QLD 1707); 8 specimens, AM P71105 (QLD 1710); 3 specimens, AM P71051 (QLD 1718); 1 specimen, AM P71129 (QLD 1750); 1 specimen, AM P71214 (QLD 1760); 1 specimen, AM P71224 (QLD 1760); 7 specimens, AM P71231 (QLD 1760); 2 specimens, AM P71364 (QLD 1800); 1 male, 5.2 mm, AM P75509 (QLD 1800); 5 specimens, AM P71355 (QLD 1803); 4 specimens, AM P71543 (QLD 1823); 1 specimen, AM P71600 (QLD 1838); 3 specimens, AM P75618 (QLD 1940); 3 specimens, AM P75705 (QLD 1940); 1 specimen, AM P75619 (QLD 1970); 2 specimens, AM P75704 (QLD 1970); male, 3.9 mm, AM P77740 (QLD 1970). Type locality. Coral rubble between Tandai Point and Koilo Point, Guadalcanal, Solomon Islands (9°22.5'S 159°52.2'E). Description. Based on male, 5.2 mm, AM P75509 and male, 3.9 mm, AM P77740.. Head and body. Body small. Head eyes round; lateral cephalic lobe broad, truncated, anteroventral corner with slender seta. Antenna 1 peduncular article 1 shorter than article 2, with 3 robust setae along posterior margin. Antenna 2 peduncular article 2 cone gland reaching at least to end of peduncular article 3; article 4 subequal to article 5. Mandible palp article 1 about as long as broad, inner margin produced distally; article 2 subequal to article 3. Pereon. Gnathopod 1 coxa anteroventral corner not produced, anterior margin straight, posteroventral corner notch present; carpus subequal in length to propodus; propodus small, linear, palm convex, without posterodistal corner, with posterodistal robust setae. Gnathopod 2 asymmetrical (larger) chelate, coxa posteroventral corner notch present; propodus distolateral crown with 4 rounded or subacute spines, fourth spine well developed, palm straight, posterodistal corner produced, upturned, dactylus fitting into corner; dactylus apically blunt; (smaller) subchelate, merus with sharp posteroventral spine; palm convex, without robust setae, posterodistal corner with robust setae; dactylus with 1 or 2 setae on anterior margin. Pereopod 5 dactylar unguis anterior margin with accessory spine. Pereopods 6-7 carpus and propodus with bunches of long slender setae. Pereopod 6 basis posterior margin slightly concave; dactylar unguis anterior margin with one accessory spine. Pereopod 7 basis posterior margin straight. Pleon. Pleonite/urosomite dorsal spine formula (7-7-7-5-4/6-2). Pleonites 1–3 with sparse dorsal setae. Epimeron 1 posteroventral corner with small acute spine. Epimeron 2 posteroventral corner acute. Epimeron 3 posteroventral margin smooth. Urosomite 1 with 5 dorsal spines. Urosomite 2 with two groups of 1–3 small dorsolateral robust setae. Urosomite 3 without dorsal setae, with 2 dorsal spines. Uropod 3 outer ramus very long, about 2 x peduncle. Telson with dorsal robust setae. Female (sexually dimorphic characters). Based on female, 6.1 mm, AM P75510. Gnathopod 2 symmetrical, subchelate, subequal in size, similar to smaller gnathopod 2 of male; palm concave; dactylus posterior margin smooth, with 5 setae on anterior margin. Pereopod 7 basis expanded, posterior margin convex and tapering distally. Habitat. Marine epibenthic, living among coral rubble, sponges, sand and low algal turf in 10 to 20 m depth. Remarks. Dulichiella pacifica has four spines on the distolateral crown of male gnathopod 2 and a 7-7-7- 5-4/6-2 pleonite/urosomite formula. Four other species share these characters: D. appendiculata; D. fresnelii; D. lecroyae; and D. cuvettensis. Dulichiella pacifica is most similar to D. cuvettensis and D. fresnelii. It differs from D. cuvettensis in having one accessory spine on the dactyli of pereopods 5 to 7 (two accessory spines in D. cuvettensis) and in having bunches of long, slender setae on the carpus and propodus of male pereopods 6 and 7 which are absent in D. cuvettensis. Dulichiella pacifica differs from D. fresnelii in the posterior margin of the basis of pereopod 6 which is concave in D. pacifica and straight in D. fresnelii and in the posterior margin of the basis of pereopod 7 which is straight in D. pacifica and tapering distally in D. fresnelii. Dulichiella pacifica is a common shallow-water species in Singapore, New Guinea, New Caledonia, the Solomon Islands and north-eastern Australia. Dulichiella has not been reported from Micronesia (J.L. Barnard 1965) or Fiji (Myers 1985). On the Great Barrier Reef D. pacifica occurs from Yonge Reef in the north to One Tree Island near the southern end. Distribution. Australia. Queensland: Yonge Reef; Lizard Island; One Tree Island (current study, Lowry & Springthorpe 2005). Singapore (Lowry & Springthorpe 2005). Papua New Guinea. Madang Lagoon (Lowry & Springthorpe 2005). Solomon Islands. Guadalcanal (Lowry & Springthorpe 2005). New Caledonia: Poé Plage, West Lagoon; Thio, East Lagoon; Southwest Lagoon (Lowry & Springthorpe 2005).Published as part of Lowry, J. K. & Springthorpe, R. T., 2009, Melitidae, the Melita group *, pp. 718-735 in Zootaxa 2260 (1) on pages 720-723, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.2260.1.37, http://zenodo.org/record/530498
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