Names of hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) established by Charles McLean Fraser (1872 - 1946), excluding those from Allan Hancock Expeditions
Author
Calder, Dale R.
Author
Choong, Henry H. C.
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-10-02
4487
1
1
83
journal article
29136
10.11646/zootaxa.4487.1.1
939f52d6-d58b-4a22-8aec-dd5c6a591067
1175-5326
1456161
524B23B9-8EAA-4BD6-8937-A1B8F1C057B9
Turritopsis fascicularis
Fraser, 1943a
Oceania
armata
Kölliker, 1853: 323
.
Turritopsis fascicularis
Fraser, 1943a
: 76
, pl. 15, figs. 1a, b.
Holotype
.
MCZ-IZ 9005:
USA
,
Florida
, off
Alligator Reef
, Steamer
Bibb
Sta. 192,
24°41’45”N
,
80°27’45”W
,
216 m
, 0
8 May 1867
, one fragmentary colony, in poor condition, with hydranths and medusa buds deteriorated, coll.
L.F. de Pourtalès
, labelled “
type
”; formalin, about to be transferred to ethanol.
Type
locality.
USA
,
Florida
: off
Alligator Reef
,
24°41’45”N
,
80°27’45”W
, 118 fm (
216 m
) (
Fraser 1943a
).
Current status.
Invalid.
Remarks.
Fraser (1943a)
failed to designate a name-bearing
type
in describing
Turritopsis fascicularis
. The species was described from a hydroid collection sent to him for identification from the MCZ, and a fragmentary specimen labelled “
type
” exists in collections at the museum (MCZ-IZ 9005).
No
other
type
material of
T. fascicularis
is known to exist. Fraser’s original description implies that the species was described from a single colony (“Colony consisting of a massive, fascicled stem,
6 cm
….”), taken here to be the
holotype
by monotypy. The
type
specimen appears to have been in relatively good condition at the time it was described, comprising an intact hydrocaulus with well-preserved hydranths and medusa buds (
Fraser 1943a
, pl. 15, figs. 1a, b). It is now in multiple fragments and in poor condition, with no clearly distinguishable hydranths or gonophores. Conflicting collection data exist on labels with the hydroid, with one indicating “
May 8, 1867
” and another “
May 8 1869
”. The earlier date, as given in the online catalogue of the MCZ, has been followed here.
Miglietta (2016)
redescribed this species and provided 16S sequence data based on putative conspecifics from the Gulf of Mexico. From her analyses, Schuchert (2016) determined that
T. fascicularis
was indistinguishable from
Oceania
armata
Kölliker, 1853
based on DNA sequence data, and he placed the two names in synonymy.