On a collection of hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the southwest coast of Florida, USA
Author
Calder, Dale R.
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-10-25
4689
1
1
141
journal article
25128
10.11646/zootaxa.4689.1.1
a63613b4-e611-42e8-89cd-2d3aae126759
1175-5326
3519047
41BFBBDF-41AD-4329-B6B9-CF38D64815A6
Cordylophora caspia
(
Pallas, 1771
)
Fig. 1f
Tubularia caspia
Pallas, 1771: 479
.
Cordylophora lacustris
Wurtz & Roback, 1955: 178
.—
Mason
et al
., 1994: 152
.
Type
locality.
“In Mari Caspio…” (
Pallas 1771: 479
).
Material examined.
Caloosahatchee River at Fort Myers, on floating dock, <
1 m
, 22° C, 0.17‰,
02 November 2017
, one colony,
0.9 cm
high, without gonophores, coll. D. Calder,
ROMIZ
B4328.—
Caloosahatchee River
at
Fort Myers
, on floating dock, <
1 m
, 20° C, 6‰,
06 February 2018
, several colonies, up to
9 mm
high, with gonophores, coll.
D. Calder
,
ROMIZ
B4329
.
Remarks.
Cordylophora caspia
is reported here for the first time from the southwest coast of
Florida
. The species has been recorded previously from the Escambia River (
Wurtz & Roback 1955
) and from the Suwannee River system (
Mason
et al
. 1994
), both in northern parts of the state. Somewhat inland from the Gulf coast of
Florida
, colonies of
C. caspia
were found by
Streever (1992)
in a flooded cave system at Little River Spring, Suwannee County.
When first collected during this study, from the Caloosahatchee River estuary at Fort Myers,
Florida
(ROMIZ B4328), specimens of
C. caspia
were dormant. Within 24 hours, however, a hydranth appeared on one of the hydrocauli held in a fingerbowl of brackish water. Colonies are believed to have been inactive at the time due to environmental stresses introduced after passage of Hurricane Irma through south
Florida
on
11 September 2017
. As a result of the storm, heavy freshwater discharge into the river from nearby Lake Okeechobee had been authorized by the
United States
Army Corps of Engineers to prevent catastrophic flooding in the vicinity. Normal salinities at the location are in the oligohaline (0.5–5‰) to mesohaline (5–18‰) range, but river waters at Fort Myers were still fresh (0.17‰) when the dormant stems and stolons were collected. At the same site a few months later, active colonies with gonophores (ROMIZ B4329) were collected (
06 February 2018
) in salinities that were somewhat higher (6‰). With still higher salinities (15‰) the following month (
29 March 2018
), however, neither active nor inactive colonies were found.
Remarks on this well-known invasive hydroid, and on the likely existence of cryptic species under the name
C. caspia
, have been given previously (
Folino 2000
;
Schuchert 2004
;
Folino-Rorem
et al
. 2009
;
Calder 2010
).
Reported distribution.
Gulf coast of
Florida
.
Escambia River,
1.2 miles
(
1.9 km
) from mouth (
Wurtz & Roback 1955: 178
, as
Cordylophora lacustris
).—Suwannee River and Estuary (
Mason
et al
. 1994: 152
, as
Cordylophora lacustris
).
Elsewhere in western North Atlantic.
Atlantic and Gulf coasts of North America: widespread in areas of low salinity (see
Folino 2000
;
Folino-Rorem
et al
. 2009
; National Exotic Marine and Estuarine Species Information System: http://invasions.si.edu/nemesis/CH-INV.jsp?Species_name=
Cordylophora
+caspia).