Redescription of Chrysaora lactea Eschscholtz, 1829 (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa) from the Brazilian coast, with designation of a neotype
Author
Morandini, André C.
Author
Da, Fábio L.
Author
Silveira
Author
Cornelius, Paul F. S.
text
Zootaxa
2006
1135
29
48
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.171956
679c399b-1300-424b-a913-6f7f84265cc6
11755326
171956
Chrysaora lactea
Eschscholtz, 1829
(
Figures 1–13
)
Chrysaora lactea
Eschscholtz, 1829
: 81
–82, Pl. VII fig. 3.
Dactylometra lactea
:
L. Agassiz, 1862
: 126
.
Chrysaora hysoscella
:
Vannucci, 1954
: 123
–126, Pl. VI figs 1–2.
Chrysaora quinquecirrha
:
Goy, 1979
: 291
.
non
Chrysaora hysoscella
(Linnaeus, 1767)
.
non
Chrysaora quinquecirrha
(Desor, 1848)
.
TYPE
MATERIAL.
MZUSP
897 (
NEOTYPE
SPECIMEN): São Sebastião, São Paulo state,
Brazil
,
17.xi.1998
, on water surface, near oil terminal, J.M. Oliveira col.,
1 female
specimen preserved in 4% formaldehyde solution in sea water.
EXAMINED MATERIAL (see details in Appendix).
MNHN
Inv. M. 1715 (as
C.
hysoscella
), 1716 (as
C. quinquecirrha
); MNRJ 181, 182, 961, 1027, 1028, 1030, 1032, 1033, 1034, 1035, 1221, 1361, 1668, 1673, 1674, 1675, 1676, 1677, 1678, 1681, 1694, 1941, 2791, 2793, 2794, 3237; MZUSP 340, 341, 342, 361, 362, 363, 364, 365, 474, 764, 778, 791, 797, 799, 802, 803, 804, 807, 809, 811, 822, 824, 825, 826, 828, 829, 830, 1125, 1126, 1127, 1129, 1130, 1133, 1150, 1151, 1152, 1153, 1154, 1155, 1156, 1157, 1158, 1161, 1164, 1175, 1182, 1187, 1188, 1189, 1190, 1192, 1230, 1241, 1258, 1260, 1261, 1265, 1266, 1267, 1271, 1275, 1277, 1283, 1287, 1288, 1289, 1290, 1297, 1298, 1300, 1303, 1304, 1305, 1308, 1311, 1312, 1313, 1314; NHM 1997.998, 1997.999, 1997.1000, 1997.1001; ZMH C11673, ZMH C11674.
FIGURE 1.
Side view of an adult medusa (bell diameter 12 cm) of
Chrysaora lactea
. Note the shape of the umbrella, the colour pattern, and only 3 tentacles per octant. Specimen photographed in an aquarium.
TYPE
LOCALITY. Guanabara Bay, Rio de Janeiro,
Brazil
.
DISTRIBUTION. Western Atlantic, from
Jamaica
to the northern coast of
Argentina
. DIAGNOSIS. Live and preserved medusae average
6–11 cm
in diameter (maximum recorded size
25 cm
in diameter). Coloration: exumbrella background usually milkywhite, some specimens with small brown spots on exumbrella and oral arms, other specimens with a radial pattern of brownish triangles. Mature specimens varied in tentacle number, 3–5 tentacles per octant, the central one being the primary, the two peripheral ones the secondaries, and in the gaps between the two tertiaries.
FIGURE 2.
Diagrammatic exumbrellar view of adult medusa of
Chrysaora lactea
. Note the arrangement of the tentacles (5 per octant) and papillae on exumbrella.
DESCRIPTION OF
NEOTYPE
SPECIMEN. Umbrella almost hemispherical, diameter
10 cm
. Exumbrellar surface finely granulated (
Figure 2
), transparentwhitish. Mesoglea flexible, about
1 cm
thick on central portion, thinning towards margin. Marginal lappets round, sharper at tip, 6 per octant (2 rhopalar and 4 tentacular); rhopalar lappets slightly longer and broader than tentacular ones. Rhopalia 8, without ocelli, in deep clefts; exumbrellar sensory pit deep, blindended (
Figure 3
). Tentacle clefts varied in depth (
Figures 2
and
4
). Tentacles 40 (5 per octant), as long as bell diameter (longer in life); arranged as 23132 (central primary, secondaries laterally and tertiaries in the spaces between them) (
Figure 4
). Subumbrellar and tentacular musculature not discernible. Mouthdisc circular, but with four evident corners, grooved. Evident pillars,
2.5 cm
wide, delimited by corners of insertion of manubrium. Subgenital ostia oval,
0.5 cm
in diameter. Oral arms
ca
.
7 cm
long, Vshaped in cross section, edges delicate and convoluted, distal portion slightly spiral, distal 1/3 with reduced Vshaped free edge in cross section (
Figure 5
). Central stomach circular, marginal region limited by insertion of radial septa. Stomach pouches 16, width uniform centrally; tentacular pouches enlarged distally.
Septa
narrow, wider at proximal end (pearshaped); outer 1/3 bending towards rhopalia (~ 45º) ending straight into the margin (
Figure 4
), proximal region of the radial septa hard to see, due to enlarged mouthdisc. Gastric filaments in four interradial fields. Quadralinga absent. Gonads rimming gastric filaments, in semicircle, greatly folded; female.
FIGURE 3.
Side view of a medusa (bell diameter 9 cm) of
Chrysaora lactea
(with 3 tentacles per octant). Note the papillae on the exumbrella and damaged mouth arms, the colour pattern, and the exumbrellar sensory pit on the left side. Specimen photographed by Dr Alvaro E. Migotto (CEBIMarUSP) in aquarium.
VARIATION FROM
NEOTYPE
AND ADDITIONAL DATA. Medusa: Umbrella diameter up to
25 cm
, almost hemispherical, flat in young specimens (
0.5–3 cm
), varied in preserved specimens. Some specimens with small irregular papillae on exumbrella and oral arms (
Figures 1
,
2
and
3
). Coloration highly variable (
Figure 6
), transparentwhitish background with irregularly distributed small reddishbrown spots (warts); completely whitish; milky white background with a radial pattern of brownish triangles and irregularly distributed small reddishbrown spots (papillae) (see also
Morandini
et al
., 2005
, fig. 8 for different colour patterns). Marginal lappets round, 2–6 per octant (young having 2 and reaching up to 6); rhopalar lappets slightly wider than tentacular. Rhopalia yellowish (
in vivo
). Tentacles up to 40 (5 per octant); arranged as 2nd3rd1st3rd2nd (central primary, secondaries laterally and tertiaries in the spaces between them). Pillars coloured in some specimens strongly reddishbrown or with irregularly distributed small reddishbrown spots. Colour of gonads variable: whitish, yellowishbrown to pale pink. Planula. Elongate, pearshaped;
0.14–0.2 mm
long,
0.06–0.09 mm
wide; whitish.
Scyphistoma (
Figure 7
). Conical to gobletshaped, up to
2.2 mm
high; oral disc up to
1.2 mm
wide; tentacles of scyphistoma typically 16 (12–21), length up to 5 times polyp height; mouth cruciform, with prominent lips elevated from the oral disk; gastric septa 4; whitish to cream. Podocysts. Trapezoid, diameter
0.2–0.3 mm
, height
0.08–0.1 mm
; yellowish brown. Strobila (
Figure 8
). Polydisc (2–10 ephyrae), whitish, lasts about 10 days. Ephyra (
Figure 9
). Typically 8 arms (lobes); 16 pointed marginal lappets; 8 rhopalia, with light yellowish concretions; mouth cruciform; diameter
1 mm
just after liberation; transparent; with one nematocyst cluster on each side of rhopalium. Cnidome (
Figure 10
). Holotrichous isorhizae present in medusae (tentacles and gastric filaments), ephyrae, and polyps; birhopaloids
type
II (quoted formerly as heterotrichous microbasic euryteles) present in medusae (tentacles and gastric filaments) and polyps (detailed measurements are presented in
Morandini
et al
., 2004
, tab. 2).
FIGURE 4.
Diagrammatic subumbrellar view of a typical octant of an adult medusa of
Chrysaora lactea
. Note the shape of the tentacular pouches and arrangement of tentacles on the margin. Note also the pearshaped inner margins of the radial septa (white). The dark portion represents the gastrovascular cavity.
SYSTEMATIC REMARKS. Some individuals remain in the threetentacled stage for the entire adult life span. The majority of the specimens collected in estuarine areas of São Paulo state had three tentacles per octant (from the
175 specimens
from estuarine areas, only 7 had more than 3 tentacles per octant — see Appendix).
FIGURE 5.
Diagrammatic side view of an oral arm of an adult medusa of
Chrysaora lactea
. Note the Vsection, frilled edge and spiral distal portion.
DEVELOPMENT. Eighttentacled medusa: in laboratory cultures, development of the first tentacles (
Figure 9
) occurs when ephyrae are
0.3–0.4 cm
wide, reaching up to
2 cm
bell diameter. 24tentacled medusa: specimens from the wild,
1.3 cm
in diameter, already had the buds of secondary tentacles. In laboratory cultures, development of the secondary tentacles (
Figure 11
) occurs in ephyrae 2–6 months after release from the strobila, when ephyrae range from
2.5–6 cm
wide (
Figure 12
). 40tentacled medusa: some specimens already have the maximum number of tentacles (40), apparently not related to size or maturity (one specimen
10 cm
in diameter already had 5 tentacles in every octant). The final pattern of arrangement of marginal tentacles in each octant is: a single long median, primary tentacle, then two secondary tentacles similar in size next to the rhopalia (edge of the gastric pouches), and finally two tertiary tentacles with one on each side between primary and secondaries, these being typically smaller. The development of the tertiary tentacles in the species occurs in the subumbrellar portion of the lappet between the primary and secondary tentacles, thus they develop on the subumbrella and the single lappet gradually ruptures to “be converted into” two separate lappets (
Figure 13
). In a few specimens, averaged
6–11 cm
in bell diameter, 6–7 tentacles per octant were noted. Therefore, there is no direct correlation between size and number of tentacles. The beginnings of the gonads appear in specimens from
4.5 to 6 cm
in diameter. Maturation, i.e. gonad development, is not directly proportional to observed size, nor is maximum tentacle number per octant.