Some thecate hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from off New Caledonia collected during KANACONO and KANADEEP expeditions of the French Tropical Deep-Sea Benthos Program
Author
Galea, Horia R.
Author
Schuchert, Peter
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2019
2019-10-04
562
1
70
journal article
25305
10.5852/ejt.2019.562
f6af87ae-7f5c-482a-8437-cba6bdcf88f5
3474305
6567F621-7A92-4D1A-8902-A1E76325AF94
Caledoniana decussata
Galea, 2015
Fig. 1
A–B
Caledoniana decussata
Galea, 2015a: 4
, figs 1B, 2C–D.
Material examined
PACIFIC OCEAN
• originally a
5.8 cm
high colony; off
New Caledonia
, stn DW4744;
22°55′ S
,
167°37′ E
; 310–
290 m
;
23 Aug. 2016
;
KANACONO
leg.; a 3.0 cm long, basal, fascicled portion was cut off for DNA extraction, DNA1342; voucher
MHNG-INVE-120777
; MNHN-IK-2015-359
•
a
3.8 cm
high colony fragment with single, basal, immature gonotheca; off
New Caledonia
, stn DW4775;
23°03′ S
,
168°17′ E
;
140–277 m
;
28 Aug. 2016
;
KANACONO
leg.; used as a whole for DNA extraction, DNA1343; voucher
MHNG-INVE-120778
•
originally a
4.5 cm
high colony fragment with a short basal branch, carrying
3 female
gonothecae; off
New Caledonia
, stn DW4697;
22°48′ S
,
167°15′ E
; 465-
449 m
;
16 Aug. 2016
;
KANACONO
leg.; a
1.2 cm
long, distal portion was cut off for DNA extraction, DNA1344; voucher
MHNG-INVE-120779
; barcode identifier MK073078; MNHN-IK-
2015-36
•
a
2.5 cm
high, unbranched colony without gonothecae; off
New Caledonia
, stn DW4726;
22°40′ S
,
167°03′ E
; 240–
181 m
;
20 Aug. 2016
;
KANACONO
leg.;
MNHN-IK-2015-362
•
a colony without gonothecae, 6.0×
3.5 cm
(height ×width; the same applies to all subsequent materials and species), with one side branch; same collecting data as for preceding;
MNHN-IK-2015-362
•
a colony, 2.3×
3.7 cm
, with 2 side branches, carrying an immature female gonotheca; same collecting data as for preceding;
MNHN-IK-2015-362
•
a ca 9×
7 cm
, branched (up to 2
nd
order branches), fully fertile male colony; same collecting data as for preceding; a short, distal fragment was cut off for DNA extraction, DNA1345;
MNHN-IK-2015-362
•
originally a
4.5 cm
high colony with one side branch, the latter bearing an immature, likely female, gonotheca; same collecting data as for preceding; a
1 cm
long fragment from the branch was cut off for DNA extraction, DNA1346; voucher
MHNG-INVE-120780
;
MNHN-IK-2015-362
•
a ca 11 ×
12 cm
, fan-shaped, fully fertile male colony; off
New Caledonia
, stn DW4728;
22°43′ S
,
167°02′ E
;
150 m
;
20 Aug. 2016
;
KANACONO
leg.; a short, distal fragment was cut off for DNA extraction, DNA1347; voucher MHNG-INVE-120781; barcode identifier MK073079;
MNHN-IK-2015-365
.
Remarks
The decussate arrangement of the hydrothecae, although quite irregular within a given colony, occurs in all the material examined, a condition never met within the two other species of the genus,
C. alata
Galea, 2015
and
C. microgona
Galea, 2015
. The species is monoecious and sexually dimorphic. The gonothecae arise laterally from below the hydrothecal bases. The male ones are club-shaped, ca
3200 µm
long and
1170 µm
wide (one gonotheca measured), tapering below into an indistinct pedicel; there is no noticeable aperture distally. The female gonothecae are large, ca
3890 µm
high and
2630 µm
wide in lateral view (one gonotheca measured), recalling a closed hand wearing a mitten; they are bilaterally symmetrical and contain a large, globular, inner cavity protecting at least a large, ovoid oocyte, the latter ca 925×
590 µm
; the aperture is half-moon-shaped, faces downwards, and does not appear to possess an opercular apparatus.
Although the morphology of the fully-formed gonotheca of
C. alata
, the
type
species of the genus, is as yet unknown, it is assumed that the specimen depicted by
Galea (2015a
,
Fig. 2A
) is likely to adopt a similar shape to that of its counterparts produced by both
C. decussata
and
C. microgona
(see below), thus further justifying their assignment to the same genus.
The three species of
Caledoniana
Galea, 2015
were included provisionally in the family
Sertulariidae Lamouroux, 1812 (
Galea 2015a
)
, but it is now demonstrated that, at least
C. decussata
and
C. microgona
, belong instead to the
Staurothecidae
Maronna
et al
., 2016
(see ‘Molecular study’ section).
As noted earlier by
Galea (2015a)
,
C. decussata
shows affinities with
Staurotheca
megalotheca
Vervoort & Watson, 2003
, especially regarding the size and the decussate arrangement of their hydrothecae. However, the gonothecae of the latter differ much from those of both
C. decussata
and
C. microgona
, in having a small, rounded, eccentric, sub-terminal aperture borne on a short neck region, unless it is proved that its gonothecae are sexually dimorphic, thus strongly resembling to the males of “
Solenoscyphus
”
striatus
Galea, 2015a
(see below). Anyway, it could be reasonably assumed that
S. megalotheca
is a true staurothecid hydroid, although its assignment to a given genus is impossible in the absence of evidence from molecular data.
In addition,
Giganthotheca
maxima
Vervoort & Watson, 2003
(
Vervoort & Watson 2003
: fig. 26E–F) has female gonothecae approaching the morphology of those met with in both
C. decussata
and
C. microgona
, suggesting not only a reasonable assignment of this species to the
Staurothecidae
, but also a possible genus transfer to
Caledoniana
. But, again, only molecular data are expected to solve the intricacies of this species group.
Distribution
Only known from off
New Caledonia
(
Galea 2015a
; present study).