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  1. Nephtys cirrosa is a thin, smooth, segmented worm, up to 10 cm in length. Its head is small, with four small antennae. Nephtys cirrosa has a large proboscis, covered in prominent papillae, that it projects and uses to dig into the sediment.
    www.marlin.ac.uk/species/detail/1795
    Nephtys cirrosa is a relatively long-lived polychaete with a lifespan of 6 to possibly as much as 9 years. It matures at 1 year and the females release over 10,000 (and up to 80,000 depending on species) eggs of 0.11-0.12mm from April through to March.
    www.marlin.ac.uk/habitats/detail/50
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    Nephtys cirrosa is an active worm which demonstrates the characteristic swimming motion (a rapid lateral wriggling, starting from the rear and increasing in amplitude towards the head) of the Nephtyidae. Found throughout the British Isles, where it nears the northern limit of its distribution.
    Found throughout the British Isles, where it nears the northern limit of its distribution. Nephtys cirrosa reaches its northern limit in Scotland, and German Bight of the North Sea. The species is found in the Mediterranean. Nephtys cirrosa lives infaunally in sandy sediment in the intertidal and shallow sublittoral, where it is often abundant.
    Nephtys cirrosa prefers cleaner and coarser sand than Nephtys hombergii. Four species of Nephtys ( Nephtys caeca, Nephtys cirrosa, Nephtys hombergii and Nephtys longosetosa) occur intertidally in the British Isles, two others, Nephtys ciliata and Nephtys hystricis, are confined almost exclusively to the subtidal (Olive & Morgan, 1991).
    The distribution of Nephtys cirrosa and Nephtys hombergii of the south western coasts of England and Wales. Journal of Animal Ecology, 29, 117-147. Eleftheriou, A. & McIntyre, A.D., 1976. The intertidal fauna of sandy beaches-a survey of the Scottish coast. Scottish Fisheries Research Report, 6, 1-61. Fauchald, K., 1977. The polychaete worms.
  3. Nephtys cirrosa - Wikipedia

  4. Nephtys cirrosa Ehlers, 1868 - World Register of Marine Species

  5. WebResilience and recovery rates of habitat. Nephtys cirrosa is a relatively long-lived polychaete with a lifespan of six to possibly as much as nine years. It matures at one year and the females release over 10,000 (and …

  6. Macrobenthos of the North Sea - Polychaeta: Nephtys cirrosa

  7. Nephtys cirrosa, White catworm - sealifebase.se

  8. The Distribution of Nephtys cirrosa and N. hombergi on the South ...

  9. Nephtys cirrosa Ehlers, 1868 - GBIF

  10. Nephtys cirrosa - Ehlers, 1868

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