Citations:debranchiate


 * 1864 October,, “On the Septa and Siphuncles of Cephalopod Shells” in The Quarterly Journal of Science I, № iv, page 761/2:
 * If this is the significance of septa in the nautilus, the same must be said of all nautiloid shells, and the families of Ammonites and Orthoceratites; and as the structure of the phragmacone of Belemnites is essentially similar, it must also be applied to such debranchiate shells as are chambered.
 * 1883, William Miller, The Heavenly Bodies: Their Nature and Habitability, Hodder, page 197:
 * The Debranchiate Cephalopods appear with equal apparent suddenness on the older Mesozoic deposits, and no known type of the Palæozoic period can be pointed to as a possible ancestor.
 * 1934, Natural History Report: Zoology VII,, page 144:
 * One was wholly debranchiate, the other had but one gill plume remaining.
 * 1988, Jost Wiedmann and Jürgen Kullmann (editors), Cephalopods Present and Past: Otto Heinrich Schindewolf Symposium, 1985 (2nd International Cephalopod Symposium), E. Schweizerbart’sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, ISBN 3510651332 (10), ISBN 9783510651337 (13), page 676:
 * Sectioned buccal masses of several debranchiate cephalopods prepared by Mrs. von Boletzky were studied with the help of S. von Boletzky at the Laboratoire Arago in Banyuls-sur-Mer.