Additional shallow-water thecate hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Guadeloupe and Les Saintes, French Lesser Antilles
Author
Galea, Horia R.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2570
1
40
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.197380
623f5942-0074-4d90-b034-a0b102d5a3e6
1175-5326
197380
Halecium dyssymetrum
Billard, 1929
(fig. 3K, L)
Halecium dyssymetrum
Billard, 1929
: 307
, fig. 1C.―
Leloup, 1935
: 8
, fig. 1.―Millard, 1975: 150, fig. 48H, J.―
Migotto, 1996
: 32
, fig. 7D–F.―
Watson, 1996
: 79
, tab. 1.―
Watson, 1997
: 514
, fig. 4A, B.―
Watson, 2000
: 9
, fig. 6.
Endothecium dyssymetrum
―
Calder, 1991
: 14
, figs 6, 7.
Sagamihydra dyssymetra
―
Calder & Kirkendale, 2005
: 482
.
Material examined
.
Stn.13
: 0
3.12.2009
, 10 m—three sterile stems, to
7 mm
high, on
Sertularella diaphana
(
Allman, 1885
)
, morphotype 2.
Remarks
. For descriptions of this species, see
Calder (1991)
and
Migotto (1996)
.
Bouillon (1985)
regarded
Endothecium
Fraser, 1935
as congeneric with
Halecium
Oken, 1815
. Some authors (
e.g.
Calder 1991
;
Calder & Kirkendale 2005
) recognized
Sagamihydra
Hirohito, 1995
(=
Endothecium
Fraser, 1935
) as valid, on the account of the origin of gonophores, the presence of large nematocysts, and the likely existence of an intertentacular web.
However, gonothecae arising (sometimes not exclusively) from within the hydrothecal lumen are not uncommon within the genus,
e.g.
H. arcticum
Ronowicz & Schuchert, 2007
;
H. cymiforme
Allman, 1888
(see Galea
et al
. 2009);
H. fragile
Hodgson, 1950
(see
Watson & Vervoort 2001
);
H. inhacae
Millard, 1958
;
H. interpolatum
Ritchie, 1907
(see
Watson 2008
);
H. lankesteri
(
Bourne, 1890
)
(see
Schuchert 2005
);
H. liouvillei
Billard, 1934
(see
Ramil
et al
. 1998
).
The gonothecae of
H. dyssymetrum
, and the nominal species
Endothecium reduplicatum
Fraser, 1935
, and
E. paucinodum
Fraser, 1947
share a quite unusual morphology among the haleciids. The ova of both
E. reduplicatum
and
H. dyssymetrum
are externally held in acrocysts (see Hirohito 1995 and
Migotto 1996
, respectively). On the other hand, the occurrence of an intertentacular web is rather uncommon in haleciids exclusive of
Mitrocomium
Haeckel, 1879
, and it is certain for
H. dyssymetrum
(
Calder 1991
;
Migotto 1996
) and
E. reduplicatum
(see Hirohito 1995). Conversely, the presence of large nematocysts in these species does not seem particularly unusual.
Migotto (1996)
showed that the capsules were holotrichous isorhizas in specimens of
H. dyssymetrum
from
Brazil
. In the present material none is discharged; they occur abundantly in the hydranth body, but also in the tentacular region, and their relationship with the intertentacular web could not be confidently ascertained, the latter being barely apparent in the rather contracted hydranths examined. According to A.E. Migotto (pers. comm.), the capsules are only scattered in the hydranth body and gonophore, and absent from the intertentacular web.
No information is presently available concerning the nematocyst
type
of
E. reduplicatum
, but
Calder (1991)
regarded them, with a query, as haplonemes.
Holotrichous isorhizas are now recognized to occur in other
Halecium
species, as for instance in
H. fjordlandicum
Galea, 2007
2. In this case, the capsules are organized in a belt around the hydranth body. No intertentacular web is reported in this species, and its gonothecae are unknown.
Taken together, these scanty data suggest that the distinction between
Halecium
and
Endothecium
is presently too vague to allow a confident separation. Accumulation of additional data on cnidome composition is necessary, as well as the study of living hydranths to detect the presence of a putative intertentacular web.
Caribbean records
. Caribbean coast of
Panama
(
Calder & Kirkendale 2005, as
Sagamihydra dyssymetra
).
World distribution
.
Indonesia
(
Billard 1929
), Dry
Tortugas
(
Leloup 1935
), off
Mozambique
(Millard 1975),
Bermuda
(
Calder 1991
),
Brazil
(
Migotto 1996
),
Australia
(
Watson 1996
,
1997
,
2000
).