Benthic hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Weddell Sea (Antarctica)
Author
Soto, Joan J.
Author
Peña, Álvaro L.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-03-22
4570
1
1
78
journal article
27992
10.11646/zootaxa.4570.1.1
66601a1e-ba16-41b2-b182-0fd80e75ccba
1175-5326
2608527
EF369E98-EBD9-4647-B081-65AD1794A27C
Hydractinia dendritica
Hickson & Gravely, 1907
(
Fig. 3
a–f)
Material examined.
ANT XV/3
:
48-33
, some polyps, on
H. interpolatum
and
O. terranovae
, with developing gonophores;
48-36
, numerous polyps, on
O. terranovae
, with developing gonophores;
48-39
, several polyps, on dead octocoral, with developing gonophores;
48-210
, numerous polyps, on
O. terranovae
, with developing gonophores;
48-220
, several polyps, on
Sc. nana
, with developing gonophores;
48-264
, several polyps, on dead octocoral, with developing gonophores;
ANT XVII/3
:
111-5
, numerous polyps, on
O. terranovae
, with mature gonophores;
111-7
, numerous polyps, on dead octocoral,
O. terranovae
and
T. longstaffi
, with mature gonophores;
111-9
, numerous polyps, on
Sc. unifurcata
and
T. longstaffi
, with mature gonophores;
111-18
, numerous polyps, on
O. terranovae
, with mature gonophores;
ANT XXI/2
:
PS65/248
, few polyps, on
Eudendrium
sp.2, with developing gonophores;
PS65/281
, several polyps, on
O. terranovae
, with developing gonophores.
Remarks.
The material examined here entirely coincides with the re-description of the type-series of
H. dendritica
provided by
Peña Cantero (2015)
, including the presence of erect stems, dwarf gonophores (
Fig. 3e
), and dactylozooids (
Fig. 3f
).
Hydractinia dendritica
seems to have different growing strategies depending on the substrate on which it develops, as it has already been reported for other congeneric (
Schuchert 2008a
). In the material examined, some sections of the same colony (or whole colonies) develop sharp spines when gastrozooids and dactyolozooids are not yet developed or are proportionally less abundant (
Fig. 3c
), while other portions (or colonies) are almost deprived of spines but have abundant gastrozooids, and some dactylozooids (c. one dactylozooid per 10–20 gastrozooids). The fully mature colony, where gonozooids carrying gonophores are found, have a sort of perisarcal wall joining spines, as a kind of “room divider”, which could act as an extra-protection for the reproductive polyps (
Fig. 3b, e
). All this different growing morphologies can be observed in the same colony, and we suggest they correspond either to differences in the substrate used or to ontogenetic changes.
Ecology and distribution.
The species had been found once, in McMurdo Sound (Ross Sea), at a depth of
18 m
(
Hickson & Gravely 1907
); our material was collected from several locations in the Weddell Sea, at depths between 62 and
473 m
, growing on different substrates (see
Tab. 3
). Present contribution constitutes the second report of the species, and the first evidence from both the Weddell Sea and West
Antarctica
, pointing to a circum- Antarctic distribution.