From daemon  Mon Dec  2 13:17:53 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id NAA03086
Message-Id: <199612022117.NAA03086@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Tue, 3 Dec 1996 01:38:50 +0000
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: Marie Pendle EG DFR <M.A.PENDLE@dfr.maff.gov.uk>
Subject:       Psammolyce spp


I am looking for any help I can get with the identification of a scaleworm 
from the English Channel.  It is fairly large - about 180mm in length; the 
elytra extend right down the body, but not completely across.  The elytra 
bear club-shaped papillate protrusions and marginate filiform papillae too. 
 We think that it is a species of Psammolyce ( it is sand encrusted) - there 
is a long dorsal cirrus on the third chaetiger - but have no literature to 
identify it more positively.  It has come from a sandy gravel substrate, 
shallow offshore site.  The chaetae include compound chaetae and high 
numbers of simple chaetae that give it a fluffy appearance.  Any suggestions 
would be appreciated.

Marie Pendle and Jane Greening
MAFF Fisheries Laboratory
Remembrance Avenue
Burnham-on-Crouch
Essex
United Kingdom

e-mail j.greening@dfr.maff.gov.uk
              m.a.pendle@dfr.maff.gov.uk     

From daemon  Mon Dec  2 13:19:24 1996
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To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Mon, 02 Dec 1996 14:39:44 -0200
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: Paulo da Cunha Lana <lana@cem.ufpr.br>
Organization:  Centro de Estudos do Mar
Subject:       Sixth Polychaete Conference

Dear colleagues,

As you may know, I have widely utilized e-mail and WWW resources to
provide information about the next polychaete conference (thanks again,
Geoff!). However, I am afraid that many researchers or institutions may
not have easy access to computer, e-mail or WWW facilities. About 800
flyers are also being sent to marine research institutions and
polychaetologists all over the world. To make my task easier, I would
appreciate to receive names and addresses of people or institutions that
you know for sure are not connected to the Internet. Addresses from
Africa and South America, which have been under-represented in our
previous meetings, will be particularly welcome.
	
Up to now,  50 polychaetologists  have sent their registration forms. If
you plan to attend the conference, please do not forget to register.
It will be much easier for me to organize and to negotiate better prices
for hotels, meals and excursions if I have a good idea of the number of
participants well in advance. Please do not forget to tell me if you
plan to make field collecting trips or if you would like to spend some
days at Brazilian research institutions just after or before the
conference. I will be glad to get the necessary permits and to make the
necessary contacts with  Brazilian  colleagues or marine stations in
order to facilitate that.

Waiting for your registration forms, I send all my best regards.

Paulo Lana

Paulo da Cunha Lana <lana@cem.ufpr.br>

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From daemon  Mon Dec  2 17:53:57 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id RAA11551
Message-Id: <199612030153.RAA11551@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Tue, 03 Dec 1996 02:40:56 +0000
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: C Y Tsai <C.Y.Tsai@durham.ac.uk>
Organization:  Dept. of Biological Sciences, University of Durham
Subject:       nocturnal activity of polychaete

Hello Everyone,

I am a postgraduate student in studying the day/night feeding ecology of
the Curlew (Numenius arquata), owing to the main diets of the Curlew are
Nereis species. I'd like to know if there are literatures regarding the
nocturnal activity of the Nereis species or other polychaetes. This will
be the key point to explain why Curlew feed at night. If the Nereis
species are active at night, then the predator, Curlew, will easily to
find their prey.
I also need to captive the Nereis in the lab to observe the changes of
burrow depth between day/night, would you please to give me some good
advices to carry the Nereis (e.g. sea water, nutrient, sediments.....).
Any suggestion will be greatly appreciated.

Chia-Yang Tsai
Department of Biological Science
University of Durham
C.Y.Tsai@durham.ac.uk


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From daemon  Tue Dec  3 13:16:26 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id NAA20488
Message-Id: <199612032116.NAA20488@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: LLLPOLYTAX@aol.com
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Tue, 3 Dec 1996 12:22:30 -0500
Subject:       Fifth International Conference Proceedings

Annelidians,

I am posting this at Dr. Don Reish's request.  

Page proofs for papers accepted for the Proceedings of the Fifth
International Polychaete Conference will be sent to authors in early January.
He asks that authors quickly (1 week) review the proofs and return them to
the Bulletin of Marine Science right away.  He wanted this notification to go
out so those with travel plans will be able to anticipate this occuring and
be able to make arrangements to have this mail forwarded to them.

Thanks to those of you who responded to me regarding my earlier announcement
of the March 1997 date for publication of the Proceedings.  I will take this
opportunity to let you all know that when issues are available for purchase
there will be a posting on Annelida with all the information needed to order
a copy.  

Worm regards to all,

Larry Lovell
Polychaete Taxonomist 

P.S.  I have been very busy recently, but have been doing my own research
regarding Nephtys neotenus and its synonomy with Nephtys cornuta and its
placement in Micronephthys.  I will present my initial results shortly.

<LLLPOLYTAX@aol.com>
From daemon  Thu Dec  5 01:32:05 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id BAA03178
Message-Id: <199612050932.BAA03178@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: Borge.Holte@FM-TR.SRI.telemax.no
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          05 Dec 1996 09:56:03 +0100
Subject:       Feeding habits of Myriochele

Dear editor.

I have problems to find informations on the feeding habits of
Myriochele. If possible, I hereby request for any help via  the
"Annelida net"  through the following message:

The functional role of Myriochele oculata.

For the time being I am prepearing a MS about  ecological interactions and,
to some degree, energetic pathways in the sediments of a pristine fjord in
Northern Norway. For one particular genus it seems very difficult to find
any published information on feeding habits, namely the oweniid 
Myriochele which seems to be quite frequent in different environmental
systems in north-east fine-particulated Atlantic sediments. Do anyone know
where to find published knowledge on whether Myriochele is a surface or 
subsurface detrivore? Other undocumented observations are also of interest.
Some informations are available on the oweniid genus Owenia, but these
genera are probably not comparable with respect to feeding
structures/organs and feeding habits.

Regards

Borge Holte
borge.holte@fm-tr.sri.telemax.no


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From daemon  Mon Dec  9 17:09:45 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id RAA07401
Message-Id: <199612100109.RAA07401@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: "Geoff Read" <g.read@niwa.cri.nz>
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
Organization:  NIWA
Date:          Tue, 10 Dec 1996 13:29:58 +1100
Subject:       Aciculae and Orbiniids

Annelida folk,

It occurs to me that the embedded aciculae found as  parapodial lobe
supports in Orbiniidae are an interesting feature perhaps  unique outside
of the Eunicida and Phyllodocida where similar supports are at their most
noticeable. True or false? Do the embedded setae of chaetopterids
also qualify? Are there any other families outside those orders which also have
aciculae? Are they also absent in Amphinomida? I imagine the orbiniid aciculae
are no more than  coincidental not-very-near-parallel developments in this
particular family.  Is it thus possible for  (say) cladistic convenience
to define phyllodocida-type acicula(e) that excludes the orbiniid
lookalike? (Perhaps - internal aciculae on both rami, all setigers?)

Opinions & observations are welcome.

--
Geoff Read             <g.read@niwa.cri.nz>
|\ | | \  /\  /  /\    Nat. Inst. Water & Atmos. Res., Wellington NZ
| \| |  \/  \/  /--\   Taihoro Nukurangi	 
Annelida resources => http://www.keil.ukans.edu/~worms/annelid.html
ANNELIDA mailing list => annelida@net.bio.net & biosci-server@net.bio.net
       List Archives  => http://www.bio.net:80/hypermail/ANNELIDA/
--




From daemon  Tue Dec 10 13:33:37 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id NAA10019
Message-Id: <199612102133.NAA10019@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: LLLPOLYTAX@aol.com
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Tue, 10 Dec 1996 11:41:56 -0500
Subject:       5th Conference Proceedings [author proofs]

Dear Annelidans,

I want to correct the announcement sent out last week regarding the time
frame for receiving proofs from the Bulletin of Marine Science.  The Bulletin
has told Dr. Reish that they will send proofs to authors sometime between
early January and mid-February.  If Dr. Reish receives any further
clarification on this, it will be posted ASAP.  My apologies for any
confusion or misconceptions resulting from my incomplete previous
announcement.  

Wishing everyone Happy Holidays!

Larry Lovell
Polychaete Taxonomist

LLLPOLYTAX@aol.com
From daemon  Tue Dec 10 13:33:32 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id NAA10001
Message-Id: <199612102133.NAA10001@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Tue, 10 Dec 1996 19:43:48 +0200
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: dani@ceab.es (Daniel Martin)
Subject:       Request on Stratiodrilus [Histriobdellidae]

Dear colleagues,

We are interested in the symbiotic interactions involving polychaetes. We
have been looking for different genus of parasitic polychaetes and we have
succeed in finding most information we need. But it has been impossible for
us to find information on Stratriodrilus genus other than the mention of
the existence of, at least, five species inhabiting crustacean hosts in
Gennings & Gelder (1976) paper on Histriobdella homari (Biol. Bull. 151:
489-517).

Any information concerning references on this genus (including taxonomical
descriptions, ecology or infestation patterns) would be welcomed.

Thank you very much in advance,

Daniel Martin & Temir Britayev.

Dr. Daniel Martin
Centre d'Estudis Avancats de Blanes (C.S.I.C.)
Cami de Sta. Barbara s/n
17300 Blanes, Girona
Spain
FAX:  34 72 337806
Phone: 34 72 336101
WWW page: http://www.ceab.es

dani@ceab.es (Daniel Martin)
From daemon  Tue Dec 10 14:39:17 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id OAA17378
Message-Id: <199612102239.OAA17378@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: "Geoff Read" <g.read@niwa.cri.nz>
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
Organization:  NIWA
Date:          Wed, 11 Dec 1996 10:57:02 +1100
Subject:       Re: Request on Stratiodrilus [Histriobdellidae]

Daniel Martin requested:
> ... information on Stratriodrilus genus other than the mention of
> the existence of, at least, five species inhabiting crustacean hosts in
> Gennings & Gelder (1976) paper on Histriobdella homari (Biol. Bull. 151:
> 489-517).

Well, there seems to be a reasonable number of papers over the years.
Some recent citations are:

Moyano,Hugo IG; Carrasco,Franklin; Gacitua,Santiago (1993): On Chilean
species of the genus Stratiodrilus Haswell, 1900, Polychaeta,
Histriobdellidae. Boletin de la Sociedad de Biologia de Concepcion 64,
147-157.

Cannon,LRG; Jennings,JB (1987): Occurrence and nutritional relationships of
four ectosymbiotes of the freshwater crayfishes Cherax dispar Riek and
Cherax punctatus Clark, Crustacea : Decapoda, in Queensland [Australia].
Aust. J. Mar. Freshwater. Res. 38(3), 419-427.

Vila,PI; Bahamonde,NN (1985): Two new species of Stratiodrilus, S.
aeglaphilus and S. pugnaxi (Annelida: Histriobdellidae) from Chile.
Proceedings. of. the. Biological. Society. of. Washington. 98(2),
347-350

--
  Geoff Read <g.read@niwa.cri.nz>
From daemon  Wed Dec 11 12:52:21 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id MAA02133
Message-Id: <199612112052.MAA02133@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Wed, 11 Dec 1996 12:25:49 +0100
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: hove@bio.uva.nl (Harry A. ten Hove)
Subject:       Stratiodrilus

111296

Dear Daniel,

Sorry I trashed your and Geoff's messages too quickly, hence this broadcast
reply:

Long's bibliography gives:
Stratiodrilus platensis. 1927, CORDERO, E, n.sp.
Stratiodrilus platensis. 1950, LANG, K, CORDERO, morphology
Stratiodrilus. 1916, HASWELL, W., 301-11, Embryology
Stratiodrilus. 1928, HARRISON, L., desc. of n.sp.

The actual references can be found in Hartman's 1959 Bibliography,
alternatively it should be possible to trace them in the Zoological Record.
Wormly,   
Harry A. ten Hove
Institute for Systematics and Populationbiology
Zoological Museum, University of Amsterdam
POB 94766, 1090 GT AMSTERDAM


tel. 3120 5256906
fax. 3120 5255402
Email: hove@bio.uva.nl
From daemon  Thu Dec 12 13:35:32 1996
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Message-Id: <199612122135.NAA03759@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Thu, 12 Dec 1996 02:00:17 -0800
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: BIOSCI Administrator <biohelp@net.bio.net>
Subject:       BIOSCI/bionet miniFAQ & Fundraiser

(LAST REVISION: 30-JUL-95)

This BIOSCI "miniFAQ" is designed to answer the questions that come up
the *most frequently*.  The main BIOSCI FAQ (Frequently Asked
Questions) is accessible on the World Wide Web at URL
http://www.bio.net/.

If you can not find an answer to your question in this or other
documentation, the BIOSCI technical support staff answers e-mail
queries sent to

		       biosci-help@net.bio.net

We can only answer questions about the use of the newsgroups and
mailing lists.  We unfortunately do not have the staff to do Internet
information searches or answer scientific questions.  Please post
those to the appropriate BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.


	Contents:
	--------
	0) BIOSCI NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT!!

	1) Using the WWW to access the BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.

	2) What to do about "spams," i.e., junk mail, ads, etc.

	3) Examples of subscribing and unsubscribing to the mailing lists.

	4) The BIOSCI user address and research interest directory.


0) BIOSCI NEEDS YOUR SUPPORT!!
------------------------------
BIOSCI's government funding has been expended, and we are now
operating solely from advertising revenue that we have raised from our
Web site at http://www.bio.net/.  We need just a few minutes of your
time to help us serve you.

You can do two important things which will take very little time for
you individually and will immensely help us continue to help you.

First, please use our WWW system at http://www.bio.net/ to access the
archives.  You can post or reply to messages via your Web browser as
described in item #1 below.  Your usage helps attract sponsors. If you
contact any of our sponsors, please be sure to thank them for
supporting BIOSCI. It is critical for them to get this feedback if
they are to continue their sponsorship for the long term.

Second, if you work for a company or organization that provides
products or services of interest to the biology community, please pass
this message on to your marketing or marketing communications
department or other appropriate group.  Please ask them to help
support BIOSCI by sponsoring our Web site and explain the uses and
benefits of the system to the biology community. If they are
interested, they can then contact us for further information at our
tech support address, biosci-help@net.bio.net.


1) Using the WWW to access the BIOSCI/bionet newsgroups.
--------------------------------------------------------
As of 10 December 1995, all BIOSCI/bionet full newsgroups are
accessible through the World Wide Web (WWW) at URL http://www.bio.net.
One can read and reply publicly or privately to both recent postings
and archived messages through one's Web browser if it is configured
properly to send e-mail.  Each newsgroup is equipped with its own WAIS
index.  The main BIOSCI home page also has access to the BIO-JOURNALS
Table of Contents database WAIS index and the BIOSCI user address
database described in another item further below.


2) What to do about "spams," i.e., junk mail, ads, etc.
-------------------------------------------------------
BIOSCI is a set of parallel USENET newsgroups (the "bionet" groups),
mailing lists, and a hypermail archive at URL http://www.bio.net/.
The same postings are distributed on all media (except for a small
number of mailing-list-only groups at net.bio.net).  Unfortunately it
is becoming a despicable practice on the Internet (by a few people out
to make a fast buck) to do automated mass postings to thousands of
newsgroups and mailing lists.  These attempts to grab free advertising
are refered to as "spams" in the usual, somewhat boneheaded, net
terminology.  USENET is more susceptible to this practice, and many
spams originate on the USENET groups and then are passed on to the
mailing lists.  However, spammers also get lists of mailing addresses
and hit these too, so neither medium is immune.

What should you do personally if you get junk mail?
---------------------------------------------------
Just delete it and move on without reading it further.  Filing a
protest is becoming increasingly useless because spammers are often
disguising the addresses where the messages are sent from.  Unless you
really understand Internet mail systems, your attempt at protest by
sending replies to the message will often end up being sent to the
address of an innocent person that the spammer is victimizing.

What can BIOSCI/bionet do to protect its newsgroups?
----------------------------------------------------
The only solution currently available is to moderate the newsgroup.
If this newsgroup is already moderated, then you are in good shape.
Moderation protects the USENET distribution from about 95% of the
spams that are being sent to date and protects the mailing lists
completely.  Moderation means, however, that someone has to take the
time to review each message before it goes out.  We have set up
software here that simply allows the moderator to forward to an
address at net.bio.net messages that (s)he wishes to have distributed.
This takes no more time than that needed to read the message and pass
it on, say about 1 min. per message.

Most newsgroups currently have a discussion leader who is responsible
for their newsgroup.  The discussions leaders and their e-mail
addresses are listed in the BIOSCI Information Sheet which is
available on the Web at http://www.bio.net/.  If a newsgroup is being
hit with too many junk postings, please contact the discussion leader
for that group and see if there is interest in moderating the group.
Please do not assume that by simply posting a complaint to the
newsgroup itself, anyone on the BIOSCI staff will act on your
complaint.  With close to 100 newsgroups to run, the BIOSCI staff has
to rely on the discussion leaders of each newsgroup to report problems
directly to us at biosci-help@net.bio.net.

We will moderate any of our newsgroups if the discussion leader tells
us that the readership of the group wishes to do so and if a moderator
is willing to do the work.  For most BIOSCI/bionet groups, this
entails only a few minutes of work each day.

Moderating a newsgroup will resolve probably 95% of the junk postings
on the USENET distribution.  Unfortunately there are easy ways for
determined spammers to override the moderation mechanism on USENET,
but we can protect our e-mail subscribers from unwanted postings if
the newsgroup is moderated.  You can also access our newsgroups over
the WWW at URL http://www.bio.net.  While this Web interface will not
stop spammers from trying to post to the groups, this will give you
yet another way, besides using USENET news, to keep the junk out of
your personal mail files.  For those of you with local USENET news
systems, the Web interface will also give you faster access to new
newsgroups and recent postings.


3) Examples of subscribing and unsubscribing to the mailing lists.
------------------------------------------------------------------
PLEASE NOTE: The BIOSCI management does NOT act on
subscription/unsubscription requests that are posted improperly to the
newsgroups and mailing lists.  People who do this only bother everyone
on the lists to no avail.  Please be sure to follow the proper
procedures below.

Gory details are in the BIOSCI Information sheets on the Web at
http://www.bio.net.  Below we give an example utilizing the
METHODS-AND-REAGENTS list at both of our two BIOSCI sites:

Users in the Americas and Pacific Rim countries who use the BIOSCI
------------------------------------------------------------------
node at computer net.bio.net:
----------------------------

A) Determine the "listname" which is the <=8 character mail address
                                         ^^^^^^^^^^^^^
   for the group.  These can be found in the BIOSCI Info. Sheet.  For
   the METHODS-AND-REAGENTS group the mailing address is
   methods@net.bio.net.  The listname is the portion of the address to
   the left of the @ sign, i.e., "methods".  The listname is used with
   the "subscribe" and "unsubscribe" commands illustrated below.

B) Mail all commands in the body of a mail message addressed to
   biosci-server@net.bio.net.  Do NOT send commands to the newsgroup
   posting addresses!  Leave the Subject: line blank, any text on it
   will be ignored.

C) In the body of your message put one or more of the following
   commands with an "end" command on the last line, e.g.,

   subscribe methods
   unsubscribe methods
   end

   Do NOT put your e-mail address or other text on these lines.  The
   server only allows you to cancel your subscription if the address
   on your mail header matches the address on our mailing list.
   Please ask for help at biosci-help@net.bio.net if your address has
   changed, e.g., if you know you are on the list but the server tells
   you that you are not a member.


Users in Europe, Africa, and Central Asia who use the BIOSCI node at
--------------------------------------------------------------------
computer daresbury.ac.uk (also known as dl.ac.uk):
-------------------------------------------------

To subscribe and unsubscribe to/from the BIOSCI lists, you need to
specify the full USENET newsgroup name with "bionet-news." prepended.
The USENET newsgroup names are listed in the BIOSCI Information sheet
on the Web at http://www.bio.net/.  For the METHODS-AND-REAGENTS list
the USENET newsgroup name is bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts, thus the
appropriate commands are

    sub bionet-news.bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts

    unsub bionet-news.bionet.molbio.methds-reagnts

These commands are included in a message addressed to mxt@dl.ac.uk,
NOT to the newsgroup mailing addresses.  As usual, include the text in
the body of the message as text on the Subject: line is ignored.

To unsubscribe from all the lists at the UK node, use

    unsub bionet-news

Please note that if the address in the list is different than the one
in your mail message header, you will not be able to unsubscribe by
this method. If you have problems, please mail biosci@daresbury.ac.uk.


4) The BIOSCI user address and research interest directory.
-----------------------------------------------------------
Please take this opportunity to add your name, address, and research
interest information to the BIOSCI User Address Database if you have
not already done so.

You can fill out the address form directly through our Web page at URL
http://www.bio.net/adrform.html.

The address database is reindexed nightly for WWW access (the URL is
http://www.bio.net/).  If you are not directly on the Internet but can
reach it by e-mail, please use our waismail server to access the user
directory.  waismail use is described above.  You can also request a
user address form by e-mail from biosci-help@net.bio.net.

Please check your database entry from time-to-time to see if your
address information is still up-to-date.  Because of our limited
personnel resources, we ask that you resubmit a *complete* form to
revise your entry; we only replace complete entries and do not have
resources to edit old forms.

				Sincerely,

				Dave Kristofferson
				BIOSCI/bionet Manager

				biosci-help@net.bio.net

From daemon  Mon Dec 16 13:22:02 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id NAA17000
Message-Id: <199612162122.NAA17000@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: ks@sfb313.uni-kiel.de (Klaus Schnack)
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
Subject:       working address of Borge Holthe
Date:          Mon, 16 Dec 96 21:11:13 NFT

Hi,

some times ago Borge Holthe asked for some
informations on Myriochele.
Does anybody knows a _working_ address of him?

Thanks
 Klaus
                    ,,,
                   (o o)
----------------oOO-(_)-OOo-------------------------------
Klaus Schnack                        ks@sfb313.uni-kiel.de
----------------------------------------------------------
From daemon  Tue Dec 31 22:10:01 1996
Received: (from daemon@localhost) by net.bio.net (8.6.12/8.6.6) id WAA14076
Message-Id: <199701010610.WAA14076@net.bio.net>
To: annelida@net.bio.net
From: "Geoff Read" <gread@actrix.gen.nz>
Reply-To: annelida@net.bio.net
Date:          Wed, 1 Jan 1997 16:13:23 +0000
Subject:       Welcome to Annelida 1997 - release of PRO-6

Happy New Year to all ANNELIDA subscribers!!!

Yes, I have been saving this message to send on this significant day :-)

Welcome to another year of helpful and friendly discussion via 
Annelida (I hope). 

I have produced another Web edition  of Polychaete Researchers Online,
called it PRO 6,  and put it in the usual place. A link to the older PRO
5 is also there. Let me know if you have any problems accessing either. I
don't plan to send out an e-mail version of this one.

URL:http://www.keil.ukans.edu/~worms/pro.html

This I hope includes all minor updates people have  sent me as well as new 
entries for Camargo, De Leon, Gil, Lardicci, Long, Martinez-Lara, Pereira, 
Perkins, Simpson, Taghon, Voelker, and Zottoli.  If there is anyone else 
who tried to send in a new form via the web site then - whoops, sorry - I 
didn't receive it. Please try again and send me a separate e-mail note at 
the same time to make sure. All people, but especially those  who have  
sent in new information, should check their entries sometime.  Also please 
let me know about  out-of-date or otherwise useless entries.

It is easy to update my database so don't hesitate to contact me anytime, 
preferably just sending the  information you are changing.  

Very best wishes to all,

Geoff Read



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