Thurber, A. R., Jones, W. J., Schnabel, K .. (2011) Dancing Food in the Deep Sea: Bacterial Culture Through a New Snowman Crab. PLoS ONE, 6 (11), e 26243. You can access it online at https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0026243. [Details]
WoRMS (2018). Kiwa puravida Thurber, Jones & Schnabel, 2011. Visit time: http: //www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php? p = tax detail & id = 590007 2018 - 10 - 24
Kareen Schnabel (National Water Quality Atmospheric Research Institute), Enrique Macpherson (Centro de Estudios Avanzados de Blanes), Tin-Yam Chan (National Taiwan University), Cheryl Morrison Center (Leetown Science Center of the United States of America), Sammy De Grave (Oklahoma Nature History Museum) and Andrew Thurber (Oregon State University) made a great contribution to this research. Also, thank you for your advice and encouragement by Mr. Kareen Schnabel, Andrew Thurber, Enrique Macpherson and Heather Bracken-Grissom (Florida International University). Thanks to the owner and staff of RRS James Cook and the ROV ISIS and KIEL 6000 technicians who gathered lobster lobsters from vents and seamounts under the most difficult conditions.
Biographical geography of the snowman club (Kiwaidae), which recorded the phylogeny of Chirostyloidea (Apomuth: Anomura)
Andrew Thurber of Oregon State University Graduate School of Earth and Ocean Science discussed this issue with me. Thurber 's comments on the deep - sea - land relationship and our responsibility to protect the land has recently been published in the European Earth Science Federation' s Biogeosciences magazine. In their report, the server and his colleagues point to many important uses of the deep sea. The deep sea is used as a dumping place for absorbing waste, including various forms of creatures seeking new medicines, and it is the environment where fish breed. I asked the server about the impact of deep sea mining. "There is absolutely no difference between cutting down Redwood forests, in addition to majestic trees there are many small creatures collectively and collectively increasingly important to the planet," he said. "We also know that many of the services offered by this habitat are interrelated."