Some Hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Great Australian Bight in the collection of the South Australian Museum
Author
Watson, Jeanette E.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-04-16
4410
1
1
34
journal article
30260
10.11646/zootaxa.4410.1.1
e3312098-042c-4aa4-8d6e-f9f744f221c3
1175-5326
1221172
49D4F0BD-2842-4C1A-A94A-F3CA202D3FFA
Lytocarpia carinifera
(Bale, 1914)
Figure 11A–E
Aglaophenia carinifera
Bale, 1914b
: 181
, pl. 38, figs 1, 2.—
Bale, 1915
: 318
.—
Bedot, 1921
: 341
.—
Blackburn, 1942
: 110
.—
Stranks, 1993
: 9
.—Watson, 2003: 253.—
Vervoort & Watson, 2003
: 261
.—
Watson, 2005
: 560
, fig. 23 A–F.—
Bouillon
et al.
, 2006
: 280
.
Material examined
.
SAM
H2330, preserved material; two microslides (
SAM
H2598, H2599).
PIRSA
Stn
QMP
5c.
Description
. Largest colony consists of six infertile stems to
100 mm
long attached to a hydrorhiza composed of several thick entwined stolons. Stems monosiphonic to lightly fascicled, one stem branched in lower region from a stolon twisted around the primary caulus.
Hydrocladia alternate, to
10 mm
long, borne on a short frontal apophysis, hydrocladial nodes usually indistinct to absent, but where visible, weakly oblique. Hydrotheca at an angle of about 30°–45° to hydrocladium, elliptical, widening from base to margin, a septum passing obliquely in posterior third forward from floor almost to abcauline wall, a short extension passing from floor a short distance into internode. Margin of hydrotheca almost perpendicular to hydrothecal axis with a conspicuous bifid vertical anterior rostrum, (rostral cusps one above the other), followed by three pairs of marginal cusps, the the first pair the longest, pointed, a deep embayment separating it from anterior rostrum, the other pairs shallower, with shallow embayments between.
Median nematotheca tubular, straight, approx. two thirds length of hydrotheca, adnate, margin sinuously open down to hydrotheca. Lateral nematotheca tubular spanner-shaped, extending beyond hydrothecal margin, orifice deeply excavated down to junction with hydrotheca; one nematothecae on cauline internode just below apophysis.
TABLE 20.
Measurements (µm) of
Lytocarpia billardi
Hydrocladial internode Hydrocladium
length |
472–512 |
width at node |
60–68 |
Hydrotheca |
length, margin to base |
360–400 |
width at margin |
232–260 |
Nematotheca |
median, length |
280–320 |
median, width at orifice |
60–80 |
lateral, length |
172–180 |
width at orifice |
36–48 |
Corbula |
leaflet width |
480–560 |
TABLE 21.
Measurements (µm) of
Lytocarpia carinifera
length of internode 400–464 depth below hydrotheca 200–280 Hydrotheca
length, base to tip anterior rostrum 464–480 width at margin 288–360 anterior rostrum length 144–160 Nematotheca
median length 352–376 median, width at orifice 72–88 lateral, length 200–224 lateral, width of orifice 72–88 A, whole colony SAM H2330. B, hydrothecae. C, hydrotheca, anterior view. D, median nematotheca. E, branch of another colony displaying a different colony form.
FIGURE 11A–E.
Lytocarpia carinifera
(Bale, 1914)
Remarks.
Lytocarpia carinifera
is well described by
Bale (1914b)
, his figures showing the bifid hydrothecal rostrum but not the deep marginal excavation of the lateral nematotheca. Because of the similarity of their hydrothecae, especially the bifid rostrum, it is possible that
L
.
carinifera
is conspecific with
Lytocarpia crucialis
(
Lamouroux, 1816
)
.
A branch
40 mm
long presumably from a much larger colony (submitted by the
South
Australian Museum after the main collection) was also examined. The branch has close-set flexuous hydrocladia to
20 mm
long, contrasting with the relatively short widely spaced hydrocladia of the specimen described above. Although macroscopically very different (
Fig. 11E
), the two specimens are virtually identical microscopically and in dimensions. It is possible although unlikely that these represent two different colony forms of the same species. Finding more, preferably fertile material of
L. carinifera
(as described above) may serve to distinguish whether one or two species are involved.
Distribution.
Great Australian Bight.