The genusGlaucus was established by monotypy in 1777 by the British naturalist Johann Reinhold Forster. He described specimens of Glaucus atlanticus recovered during the second voyage of James Cook aboard. The genus is named after the Greek sea-god Glaucus. In 1848, the German naturalist Johannes Gistel provided the substitute name Dadone for Glaucus. But it is unnecessary and is now regarded as invalid. The family Glaucidae was established in 1827 by the British zoologist John Edward Gray to contain the genus. A second species in the family was described by the Danish malacologistRudolph Bergh in 1860. He placed it under a new genus Glaucilla. However, the synapomorphies between Glaucus and Glaucilla have made the maintenance of both genera irrelevant. Therefore Glaucus is now regarded as the only genus within the family Glaucidae. Glaucidae is classified under the superfamilyAeolidioidea. In 2014, a careful DNA and anatomical study of the genus unexpectedly revealed the presence of a species complex. Only one species was found in the Atlantic, but the name Glaucus marginatus was revealed to include four separate species. There are three species in the North Pacific Subtropical Gyre System and another species in the South Pacific Subtropical Gyre System. Glaucus atlanticus also occurs throughout the Indo-Pacific as well as in the Atlantic Ocean. In the North Pacific are Glaucus marginatus, Glaucus thompsoni and Glaucus mcfarlanei, with Glaucus marginatus also occurring in the Indian Ocean and the South Pacific. Also in the South Pacific is Glaucus bennettae. Glaucus atlanticus has some genetic differences in different parts of its range but is considered to be a single species.
Species
Species within the genus Glaucus include:
Glaucus atlanticus Forster, 1777 - Atlantic Ocean
Glaucus bennettae Churchill, Valdés & Ó Foighil, 2014 - South Pacific
Glaucus mcfarlanei Churchill, Valdés & Ó Foighil, 2014 - North Pacific
Glaucus marginatus - Indo-Pacific
Glaucus thompsoni Churchill, Valdés & Ó Foighil, 2014 - North Pacific
;Species brought into synonymy:
Glaucus distichoicus d'Orbigny, 1837: synonym of Glaucus atlanticus Forster, 1777
Glaucus flagellum Blumenblach, 1803: synonym of Glaucus atlanticus Forster, 1777
Glaucus hexapterigius Cuvier, 1805: synonym of Glaucus atlanticus Forster, 1777