Census of Cnidaria (Medusozoa) and Ctenophora from South American marine waters
Author
M. P. Oliveira 1,16
Author
S P. Miranda 2, *,
Author
Es W. Mianzan 10,
Author
Ro E. Migotto 11,
Author
Ne B. Nascimento 2,11
Author
Eli Nogueira Júnior 12,
Author
Er Quiñones 13,
Author
Izio Scarabino 14,
Author
Tín Schiariti 10,
Author
Io N. Stampar 15,
Author
Tronolone 2
Author
, Quíria B.
Author
Onio C. Marques 2,11
text
Zootaxa
2016
2016-11-18
4194
1
1
256
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4194.1.1
c7258597-fa96-4b98-a6f8-aecc1f8779d5
1175-5326
C21A07A7-3AD9-4AA2-8426-EAB08BA396E6
Podocoryna borealis
(Mayer, 1900)
Synonyms in the area:
Podocoryne borealis
—Pagès & Orejas 1999 [medusa];?
Hydractinia
sp.—Galea 2007 p. 23 [polyp];
Hydractinia borealis
–Palma et al. 2007a p. 70, 73, 2007b p. 73, 74, 78, 80, 2011; Villenas
et al
. 2009; Bravo
et al
. 2011 [medusa].
Remarks: the geographic distribution of
Podocoryna borealis
(Mayer, 1900)
is restricted to the
North
Atlantic and
North
Sea (Schuchert 2008).
Distribution in
South
America: polyp—Pacific Ocean,
Chile
, at
42.38°S
72.43°W
(Galea 2007 p. 23); medusa—Pacific Ocean,
Chile
, from
41.50°S
to
54.903°S
in the Patagonian interior waters (Pagès & Orejas 1999; Galea 2007 p. 23; Palma et al. 2007a p. 70, 73, 2007b p. 73, 74, 78, 80, 2011; Villenas
et al
. 2009; Bravo
et al
. 2011).
Habitat: species with bipolar distribution (Pagès & Orejas 1999). medusa—from
0-50m
depth (Galea 2007 p. 23).