Reinhardt Kristensen

Reinhardt Møbjerg Kristensen (born 1948) is a Danish invertebrate biologist, noted for the discovery of three new phyla of microscopic animals: the Loricifera in 1983, the Cycliophora in 1995, and the Micrognathozoa in 2000. He is also considered one of the world's leading experts on tardigrades. His recent field of work revolves mostly around arctic biology.

He is also known for documenting dendrogramma, an invertebrate species that was later classified as Siphonophorae of the family Rhodaliidae.[1]

Loricifera

Kristensen collected the first girdle wearer in Roscoff, France, in 1970, but didn't describe it until 1983.[2]

Cycliophora

Kristensen and Peter Funch discovered Symbion pandora, on the mouth-parts of Norwegian lobsters, in 1995; other species were later found on other types of lobsters.

Micrognathozoa

Kristensen discovered Limnognathia maerski, the first (and so far only) known species in the group, in a radioactive spring on Disko Island in 2000.

Publications

References

  1. O’Hara, Timothy D.; Hugall, Andrew F.; MacIntosh, Hugh; Naughton, Kate M.; Williams, Alan; Moussalli, Adnan (June 2016). "Dendrogramma is a siphonophore". Current Biology. 26 (11): R457–R458. PMID 27269719. doi:10.1016/j.cub.2016.04.051.
  2. Heiner, I. 2005. Preliminary account of the loriciferan fauna of the Faroe Bank (NE Atlantic). Biofar Proceedings 2005: 213–219.


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