First Inventory of Sea Anemones (Cnidaria: Actiniaria) of the Mexican Caribbean
Author
Gonzalez-Muñoz, Ricardo
Author
Simões, Nuno
Author
Sanchez-Rodriguez, Judith
Author
Rodriguez, Estefania
Author
Segura-Puertas, Lourdes
text
Zootaxa
2012
3556
1
38
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.203987
16b1faac-a76c-4b8c-8a10-1942a32bb460
1175-5326
203987
Phymanthus crucifer
(
Le Sueur, 1817
)
(
Figure 7
,
Table 2
)
Actinia crucifera
Le Sueur, 1817
: 174
–175.
Cereus crucifer
Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864
: 31
, pl. VI, fig. 13.
Cereus Crucifer
[
sic
]
Duchassaing, 1870
: 20
.
Phymanthus cruciferus
Andres, 1883
: 501
.
Ragactis cruciata
Andres, 1883
: 471
.
Phymanthus crucifer
McMurrich, 1889a
: 51
–55.
Epicystis crucifera
Verrill, 1898
: 496
.
Epicystis osculifera
Verrill, 1900
: 556
.
Phymantes crucifer
Cutress & Cutress, 1976
: 310
.
Phimanthus crucifer
Zamponi, 1981
: 165
.
Epicystis crucifer
Cairns
, den
Hartog, & Arneson, 1986
: 177
, 179, pl. 51.
Material examined.—
Puerto Morelos
(
20°51’48.66” N
,
86°51’33.32” W
;
7 specimens
);
Punta Cancún
(
21°9’10.5” N
,
86°44’41.2” W
;
1 specimen
).
FIGURE 7.
—
Phymanthus crucifer
. (A) Oral view, morph with marginal tentacles with annular thickenings. (B) Oral view, morph with marginal smooth tentacles. (C) Lateral view. (D) Pedal disc view. (E) Cross section through proximal column. (F) Longitudinal section through oral disc and distal column. (G–M) Cnidae.—tentacle: (G) basitrich, (H) spirocyst; actinopharynx: (I) basitrich, (J) microbasic
p
-mastigophore; column: (K) basitrich; filament: (L) basitrich, (M) microbasic
p
- mastigophore. Abbreviations.—c: column, dt: discal tentacles, e: epidermis, g: gastrodermis, mt: marginal tentacles, pb: parietobasilar muscles, pd: pedal disc, rm: retractor muscle, o: oocyte, ve: vesicle, vr: verrucae. Scale bars.—A–D: 10 mm; E–F: 200 µm; G–M: 25 µm.
Diagnosis.—Fully expanded tentacles and oral disc
40–100 mm
in diameter. Oral disc
32–55 mm
in diameter, rough, variable in color, often white with dark brown, olive-green with white, or grey with green and brown (
Figure 7
A, B). Marginal and discal tentacles (
Figure 7
A, B). Marginal tentacles short, about 350–360, tapering distally, with annular thickenings (
Figure 7
A) or smooth, olive green or light brown with longitudinal colored stripes (
Figure 7
B). Discal tentacles reduced, small, vesicle-like, arranged in radial rows on oral disc. Column margin with one row of small vesicles without holotrichs (
Figure 7
C). Column cylindrical, smooth,
27–45 mm
in diameter and
15–35 mm
in height, plate-like, with rough surface, pinkish proximally and fading into whitish distally, with flamelike staining pattern. Column with longitudinal rows of adherent pink verrucae distally, 5–6 verrucae per row (
Figure 7
C, D, F). Pedal disc well developed,
12–35 mm
in diameter, bright pink or orange (
Figure 7
D). Mesenteries hexamerously arranged in four cycles (48 pairs in specimens examined): first two cycles and some mesenteries of third cycle perfect and fertile, others imperfect and sterile; gonochoric (?), only oocytes in examined specimens. Two pairs of directives each attached to a well-developed siphonoglyph. Retractor muscles strong, restricted; parietobasilar muscles well developed with long free mesogleal pennon (
Figure 7
E). Basilar muscles well developed. Marginal sphincter muscle absent. Zooxanthellae present. Cnidom: basitrichs, microbasic
pmastigophores
and spirocysts (
Figure 7
G–M; see
Table 2
).
Natural history.—
Phymanthus crucifer
lives attached strongly to coral rocks and dead coral rubble, between
1–7 m
depth, in the lagoon and fore-reef zones; the column is usually burrowed in sandy patches with only the oral disc visible above substratum.
Distribution.—
Phymanthus crucifer
is found along the Caribbean Sea, from
Bermuda
to
Barbados
(see
Table 1
); however, our specimens represent the first record for the Mexican Caribbean (Puerto Morelos and Punta Cancún reefs).
Remarks.—
Phymanthus crucifer
is the only species of the twelve valid species of the genus reported in the Caribbean Sea (
Fautin 2011
).
Carlgren (1949)
used the presence or absence of thickenings in the marginal tentacles to differentiate
Phymanthus
and
Heteranthus
Klunzinger, 1877
, the genera within
Phymanthidae
. However,
P. crucifer
includes morphs with and without thickenings in their marginal tentacles. According to
Duerden (1900)
, all forms are different stages of development of these organisms. Although a detailed morphological study is still needed to determine the value of thickenings in the marginal tentacles as a generic or species level character, preliminary results indicate that there are no differences in other morphological characters or cnidae within
Phymanthus crucifer
.