Additions to the hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) of the Bay of Fundy, northeastern North America, with a checklist of species reported from the region
Author
Calder, Dale R.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4256
1
1
86
journal article
33174
10.5281/zenodo.556851
10284664-323e-49f2-a19f-3ef15f718cc0
1175-5326
556851
985C0239-D00C-457D-B593-76A3081BCEEA
Halecium marsupiale
Bergh, 1887
Figs. 17
e, f
Halecium marsupiale
Bergh, 1887
: 334
, pl. 28, figs. 2a, b.
Type
locality.
Russian Federation
:
Kara Sea
, 20 fm (
37 m
) (
Bergh 1887: 334
).
Material
examined.
NB:
Passamaquoddy Bay
, off the northwestern side of Deer Island,
on
Hydrallmania falcata
in a
lobster trap
,
19.vi.1985
, three colonies, up to
1 cm
high, without gonophores, coll.
D. Calder
,
ROMIZ
B4132.
Description.
Hydroid colonies erect, up to about
1 cm
high, arising from a creeping, smooth to somewhat wrinkled hydrorhiza. Hydrocaulus monosiphonic, unbranched or sparingly branched, annulated at insertion with hydrorhiza, divided into internodes of varying length by distinct nodes, older hydrocauli of larger plumes straight basally, with 1-4 internodes bearing neither branches nor hydrothecal pedicels, geniculate beyond basal region, with internodes annulated basally or throughout, annulations strongest over proximal end, each internode widening at distal end in form of a Y and bearing two apophyses, with one apophysis supporting internode above and the other supporting a hydrophore or a branch, branches or hydrophores given off alternately from opposite sides of hydrocaulus. Perisarc mostly quite thin and glassy. Branches, when present, resembling distal parts of hydrocaulus. Young hydrophores with a swelling or an annulation or two above a basal node separating them from apophysis of hydrocaulus, occasionally with a deep constriction proximally, slightly wrinkled or smooth and gradually widening distally, bearing a terminal hydrotheca or primary hydrotheca; a pseudodiaphragm sometimes evident on hydrophore just below hydrotheca, with its development greater on the adcauline side; primary hydrophores commonly supporting shorter secondary or tertiary ones arising from diaphragm of hydrotheca below. All hydrothecae borne on hydrophores clearly set off from internodes of hydrocaulus, with none being
sessile
; hydrothecae quite deep for the genus, with a diaphragm below a ring of distinct desmocytes, hydrothecal cavity widening distally; margin flaring, often everted; hydrothecal wall more distinctly concave on adcauline side, hydrothecal depth to
0.07 mm
from diaphragm to margin, diameter at diaphragm to
0.12 mm
, at margin to
0.2 mm
. Hydranths relatively large, some strongly constricted in mid-region, with a distal whorl of about 16-20 filiform tentacles; basal web not observed in preserved specimens; proboscis prominent, dome-shaped.
Gonophores and gonothecae not seen.
Remarks.
Halecium marsupiale
Bergh, 1887
, previously known only from waters of the
Russian Federation
, is described as “rather rare” (
Naumov 1960
) or “rare” (
Antsulevich 2015
). Russian authors have recorded it from the Barents Sea in the west to the Bering Sea in the east. It was originally described from the Kara Sea by
Bergh (1887)
in collections from the Danish Dijmphna (Dymphna) Expedition.
Halecium marsupiale
is easily distinguished from its congeners even in the absence of gonophores. No hydrothecae occur at the distal ends of its cauline internodes, as in most species of the genus
Halecium
Oken, 1815
. Instead, they are borne at the tips of well-developed hydrophores that are separated from cauline internodal apophyses by distinct nodes. That morphology is similar in several other species of the genus, including
H. muricatum
(
Ellis & Solander, 1786
)
from boreal and Arctic waters,
H. muricatum
forma
abyssale
Broch, 1918
from bathyal waters north of Iceland, and
H. filicula
Allman, 1877
from the Straits of Florida. All three differ from
H. marsupiale
in lacking pronounced annulations on the cauline internodes, and in having much larger trophosomes with polysiphonic stems and branches. Another is
H. groenlandicum
Kramp 1911
, a robust, polysiphonic species from boreal and Arctic regions of the northern hemisphere. Unlike in
H. marsupiale
, its colonies have long, straight, smooth internodes, each with several apophyses, and its hydrothecae are shallow and only slightly flaring.
Halecium
sp., described from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge by
Calder & Vervoort (1998)
, differs in having long and mostly smooth cauline internodes.
According to
Naumov (1960)
, hydroids of
Halecium marsupiale
occur predominantly at depths between
50– 100 m
, although they have been found over a bathymetric range of
11–245 m
.
Biogeographically
, the species extends from
Arctic
regions into the boreal zone.
Its
discovery in the boreal
Bay of Fundy
expands its known geographic range to waters of northeastern
North
America. Literature on the species is given in the synonymy list of
Antsulevich
(2015)
.
Gonophores were lacking in specimens examined from the Bay of Fundy. As described by
Naumov (1960)
and
Antsulevich (2015)
, gonothecae of the species are sac-shaped, laterally flattened, and smooth, with a short stalk and a small terminal aperture. When ripe, gonophores are extruded though the aperture into a spherical marsupium.
Recorded distribution.
Bay of Fundy: recorded for the first time.
Eastern North
America: recorded for the first time.
Elsewhere: Barents Sea, White Sea, Kara Sea, Laptev Sea, Chukchi Sea, Bering Sea, Sea of Okhotsk, Sea of Japan (
Naumov 1960
;
Antsulevich 2015
).