The hydroid and medusa of Amphinema rollinsi (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa), a new species of pandeid from the Monterey Bay Submarine Canyon, USA
Author
Widmer, Chad L.
text
Zootaxa
2007
1595
53
59
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.178671
661fed86-7e50-4e5b-ab0b-c313ade74160
1175-5326
178671
Amphinema rollinsi
,
sp. n.
(
Figs. 1 – 2
)
Type
material:
Holotype
: one mature female medusa, released
15 January 2007
from
paratype
hydroid listed below and raised under laboratory conditions at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, Monterey, California; preserved in 70% ethanol; California Academy of Sciences,
CASIZ
no. 174847.
Paratypes
: one immature female medusa, released
17 January 2007
from
paratype
hydroid under laboratory conditions at the Monterey Bay Aquarium, Monterey, California; preserved in 70% ethanol; California Academy of Sciences,
CASIZ
no. 174848. A single hydroid colony, collected
25 October 2006
, growing on PVC pipe emplaced in Monterey Bay Submarine Canyon (N 36° 46. 2931; W 122° 4. 9568) on
25 May 2006
, depth
1016m
; California Academy of Sciences,
CASIZ
no. 174847.
Etymology.
The species is named in honor of Henry Rollins, artist, activist, and philosopher. It is the best way I know to thank him for his much appreciated and noble United Service Organizations (USO) service.
Description
(from living material). Hydroid colonies stolonal or with upright, monosiphonic hydrocauli, arising from a creeping hydrorhiza. Single hydranths arising from hydrocaulus on simple short pedicels lacking distinct basal annulations.
Paratype
hydrocaulus
9.5mm
tall before preservation, bearing very short, irregularly-spaced pedicels with terminal hydranths (
Fig. 1
A). Hydranths also present on creeping hydrorhizae, each with a single whorl of 8–12 mildly amphicoronate filiform tentacles, each tentacle with a small terminal cap (
Fig. 1
B) not formed by a concentration of cnidocysts. Hydranths with cylindrical columns about 475µm long, 100µm wide; hypostomes bluntly conical, with simple circular mouths. Undisturbed hydranths bending slowly from side to side; disturbed hydranths bending to one side or the other, but not the same way each time. Tentacles sometimes contracted but never retracted inside perisarcal tubes. Medusa buds (
Fig. 1
C) arising singly from short pedicels (about 175µm long) on upright hydrocauli. Medusa buds usually about 600µm long, 425µm wide.
FIGURE 1.
Hydroid of
Amphinema rollinsi
,
sp. n.
: A. Upright hydrocaulus. B. Mature hydranth. C. Medusa bud nearly ready for release. Scale bar A = 5mm. Scale bars B and C = 500µm.
Newly released medusae dome shaped, about
1.5mm
tall, 1.0mm wide, with a distinct, well-developed, thin apical projection (
Fig. 2
A); apical projection accounting for about ¼ total bell height, uniform in width, ending in a bluntly rounded point; mesoglea thin; exumbrella evenly covered with nematocysts; gastric peduncle absent; manubrium flask-shaped, cruciform in cross-section; mouth with prominent recurved lips; gonads not apparent in newly released specimens; radial canals four, simple; ring canal tubular; velum narrow. Medusae with two long, opposite, perradial marginal tentacles with elongated conical bulbs, and with two perradial and four interradial tentaculae that were all alike. Ocelli and marginal warts absent. Apical chamber shaped like two cones with bases placed together, resulting in two pointed ends, one end pointing toward and extending into the apical process and the other end pointing toward the mouth (
Figure 2
A, B).
FIGURE 2.
Medusae of
Amphinema rollinsi
,
sp. n.
A. Newly released medusa. B. Mature female medusa. Scale bars = 1mm.
Medusae maturing in about three weeks under laboratory conditions, retaining both the same domeshaped bell and thin, elongated and bluntly rounded apical process as in newly released medusae. In mature medusae the two perradial tentacles continued to elongate but all tentaculae remained short.
Holotype
medusa mature,
2.35mm
tall,
1.45mm
wide before preservation. Manubrium flask-shaped, about 25% as long as total length of bell. Gonads adradial, in form of simple regions on the either side of radial canals, not extending past upper half of manubrium. Eggs of female medusae bright red, circular, ranging in size from 175–200µm. Male medusae not observed.