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Date: | Wed, 8 Dec 1999 14:58:09 -0700 |
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Art,
I agree that this is possible, but not many books list the genera with a
description, much less the sub-genera level. As an initial step, we could
start with family listings and descriptions (I've got those ready to go with
the gastropods -- not micros though, sorry). Then people with some
expertise or interest in a particular family could add genera descriptions
and eventually species descriptions. There is a wealth of stuff already out
there -- witness the Jacksonville web page with Ranellidae, Personidae, and
the genera Lambis and Busycon (with more added all of the time). I tried
something like this on a web page but it was limited to 25 pages, so all I
got written was the family Ficidae. I have since pretty much abandoned the
page until I can set up another with more room. But if interested it is at:
http://sites.netscape.net/thomasc130/homepage
Maybe COA would want to host the site. It would be nice to have a central
location. By the way, Art, I didn't send you an example of my database of
families -- however, if you check out the web page above, it is pretty
close.
Now I have to run. In my other life of herps (reptiles and amphibians to
the uninitiated) I have a house guest flying in to speak at our annual
banquet. So I have to put away the shell mess (just got a bunch of
incredible nerite papers from Henk Mienis) and concentrate on snakes and
lizards (and some folks think shell people are bizarre).
Tom Eichhorst in New Mexico, USA
> In "The Wentletrap book", it took about 10 pages to describe all
the
> genera and sub-genera. And we used big type. I'm sure we could even add
> illustrations, the "Type Species", and hold on to the ten pages.
> Art
>
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