Some anthoathecate hydroids and limnopolyps (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Hawaiian archipelago 2590
Author
Calder, Dale R.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2010-08-31
2590
1
1
91
https://biotaxa.org/Zootaxa/article/view/zootaxa.2590.1.1
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.2590.1.1
11755334
Suborder
Filifera
Kühn, 1913
Filifera
Kühn, 1913: 227
.
Diagnosis.
Anthoathecate hydroids with hydranth tentacles filiform, not capitate or moniliform (an exception is
Ptilocodiidae
Coward, 1909
, having dactylozooids with or usually with capitate tentacles).
Gonophores fixed sporosacs, eumedusoids, or medusae. Medusae, when present, with mouth surrounded by four lips or, if mouth is round and lacks lips, with oral tentacles on or above rim; gonads on manubrium, usually subdivided into perradial, interradial, or adradial masses.
Cnidome usually including desmonemes and euryteles; stenoteles absent.
Remarks.
Representatives of the suborder
Filifera
Kühn, 1913
are distinguished by having filiform tentacles and a cnidome usually including desmonemes and euryteles, but lacking stenoteles. The group is apparently not monophyletic (
Daly
et al
. 2007
;
Cartwright
et al
. 2008
). It was assigned to the rank of order and subdivided into two suborders (Margelina
Haeckel, 1879
and Pandeida
Haeckel, 1879
) by
Bouillon & Boero (2000)
and
Bouillon
et al
. (2006)
based on differences in attributes of the medusa stage. That classification has not been followed in revisions of European
Filifera
by
Schuchert (2004
, 2007, 2008a, b). Meanwhile, ideas about phylogeny of the group continue to evolve, and classification will gradually follow. For example,
Cartwright
et al
. (2008)
recognized four separate clades in
Filifera
:
Filifera
I comprising
Eudendriidae L.
Agassiz, 1862
;
Filifera II
comprising the genera
Fabienna
Schuchert, 1996
,
Proboscidactyla
Brandt, 1835
,
Brinckmannia
Schuchert & Reiswig, 2006
, and
Hydrichthella
Stechow, 1909
;
Filifera III
comprising
Hydractiniidae L.
Agassiz, 1862
and
Stylasteridae
Gray, 1847
; and
Filifera IV
comprising
Dicoryne
Allman, 1859
+
Bougainvilliidae
Lütken, 1850
+
Oceaniidae
Eschscholtz, 1829
+
Pandeidae
Haeckel, 1879
+
Rathkeidae
Russell, 1953
(with the four included families forming a group termed “Gonoproxima,” all having gonophores on hydrocauli, pedicels, or stolons rather than on the hydranth body column).
Currently included in
Filifera
are 22 families and about 765 species (
Daly
et al
. 2007
).