Excellent Lena,
Now we have an e-copy of both Banse & Hobson and Hobson & Banse.
As analogously the errantiate volume (Banse & Hobson) pdf is also at Fisheries and Oceans Canada:
http://waves-vagues.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/waves-vagues/search-recherche/display-afficher/1491
Direct: http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/library/1491.pdf
I have fixed the annelida.net link (to Lobo Orensanz's subsequent compilation) which was faulty.
Enjoy.
Geoff
-----Original Message-----
From: annelida-bounces from oat.bio.indiana.edu [mailto:annelida-bounces from oat.bio.indiana.edu] On Behalf Of Elena Kupriyanova
Sent: Sunday, 29 June 2014 10:52 a.m.
To: Campanya i Llovet, Neus; Annelida
Subject: Re: [Annelida] Taxonomic keys
Dear Neus,
See here
http://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/library/816.pdfhttps://openlibrary.org/books/OL14113320M/Benthic_errantiate_polychaetes_of_British_Columbia_and_Washington
and here
http://www.annelida.net/nepacifi.html
But I am afraid that all this will not help you a bit because the books
include the species "known from landward of the 200-m isobath". Before
useful taxonomic keys can be produced, somebody has to study the fauna
of Barkley Canyon and this seems to be your project, right? I am happy
to help you with serpulid polychaetes should you encounter any.
Good luck!
Cheers,
Lena
On 29/06/2014 1:23 AM, Campanya i Llovet, Neus wrote:
> Dear all,
>> I'm a PhD student in Paul Snelgrove's lab, in Newfoundland. I'm studying
> the infaunal communities of a submarine canyon (Barkley Canyon, off British
> Columbia, Canada) with special interest in the methane hydrates (900 m
> depth).
> As you can imagine most of the individuals I have found are polychaetes.
> Since I'm new in this field, I need some advise on useful taxonomic keys
> for my study.