Clypeaster subdepressus

Clypeaster subdepressus is a species of sea urchin in the Family Clypeasteridae. This species was first scientifically described in 1825 by the British zoologist John Edward Gray.[1] It is a very large and flattened sea biscuit, native to the east coasts of North, Central and South America.

Clypeaster subdepressus
Scientific classification
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C. subdepressus
Binomial name
Clypeaster subdepressus
(Gray, 1825)[1]
Synonyms[1]
  • Echinanthus subdepressus Gray, 1825
  • Stolonoclypus subdepressus (Gray, 1825)
In Brazil

Distribution

This species is found in shallow water in the tropical and subtropical western Atlantic Ocean. Its range extends from North Carolina southwards to the Caribbean Sea, Central and South America, as far south as Rio de Janeiro in Brazil.[2]

gollark: As best I can tell this is saying something about a "gravitomagnetic" effect and (best attempt to parse the insanity) you're trying to go from some reference to that to "so obviously something something gravity magnetism" to "everything is electromagnetism, electric universe, intergalactic Birkeland currents".
gollark: Not really?
gollark: Well, see, you're effectively just trying to push a ton of random papers and jargon with no explanation, so no.
gollark: Frame dragging is an actual relativity thing.
gollark: This does not seem to be about whatever you're talking about.

References

  1. Kroh, Andreas (2018). "Clypeaster subdepressus (Gray, 1825)". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 4 June 2018.
  2. Schultz, Heinke A.G. (2017). Echinoidea: with bilateral symmetry. Irregularia. De Gruyter. pp. 63–64. ISBN 978-3-11-036853-6.
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