Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream
Author
Schuchert, Peter
Muséum d’histoire naturelle, C. P. 6434, CH- 1211 Genève 6, Switzerland
peter.schuchert@ville-ge.ch
Author
Collins, Richard
880 NE 33 rd Street, Boca Raton, Florida, USA
rc6684@icloud.com
text
Revue suisse de Zoologie
2021
2021-10-21
128
2
237
356
journal article
10.35929/RSZ.0049
172fa5c5-c0c4-4bd7-b710-d608237b8458
0035-418
5639938
Cirrhitiara superba
(
Mayer, 1900
)
Figs 4
A-D, 5
Tiara superba
Mayer, 1900: 34
, pl. 16 fig. 39.
Tiara pileata
var.
superba
. –
Mayer, 1910: 126
, pl. 27 fig. 8, pl. 28 figs 3-4.
Tiara pileata
f.
superba
. –
Vanhöffen, 1913a: 416
.
Cirrhitiara superba
. –
Hartlaub, 1914: 284
, fig. 237. –
Kramp, 1959a: 121
, fig. 122. –
Kramp, 1961: 97
. –
Kramp, 1968: 39
, fig. 101.
not
Cirrhitiara superba
.
–
Thiel, 1938: 296
, fig. 2.
–
Kramp, 1953: 267
. –
Van der Spoel & Bleeker, 1988: 167
, fig. 8.
Examined material:
BFLA4087
;
1 specimen
;
07
-MAY-2019
; preserved in ethanol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528672
.
–
30-JUL-2018
;
1 specimen
photographed; not collected.
Observations:
Pandeid medusa
7 mm
high and
5 mm
wide, bright pink manubrium and tentacle bulbs, apical process of variable size present, apical exumbrella with perradial furrows. Manubrium filling more than half of the volume of the subumbrella, mouth rim complexly folded. Gonads on stomach forming folds diverging from interradial, in each quadrant two adradial series of folds that are connected interradially by a transverse fold. Four broad radial canals, connected to stomach via funnel-like widenings. Four long, tapering, perradial tentacles, base laterally compressed and clasping bell margin, no abaxial spur, large red abaxial ocellus near abaxial end. Alternating with the tentacles three small bulbs, each with an abaxial ocellus and a thin cirrus usually originating laterally from bulb. All small bulbs of equal size.
16S Data:
The partial 16S gene sequence (
MW528672
) obtained was used to search for similar sequences in GenBank using the blastn function. Similar sequences found were mostly from
Leuckartiara
species
and other
Pandeidae
, giving sequence identities in the 90% range. However, there was also one sequence (
MH361354
) which had only a single mismatch in 599 aligned bases (99.8% identity, = 0.2 % divergence), a value which certainly represents intraspecific variation (reference values for
Pandeidae
acc.
Schuchert, 2018
, table 2). The matching sequence was obtained from a hydroid originating from Caribbean Sea close to
Panama
and identified as
Thecocodium
spec.
(
Miglietta
et al
., 2018b
). The hydroid is described and depicted in the supplementary material of
Miglietta
et al
. (2018b)
It is a polyp lacking tentacles. The typical capitate dactylozooids of the genus
Thecocodium
were not observed, which means that it could also belong to other genera with hydroids lacking tentacles, e.g.
Hydrichthys
(
Pandeidae
, see
Schuchert, 2007
).
.
Fig. 3.
Amphinema turrida
, bell height approximately 6 mm. (A) Lateral view. (B-D) Oblique views from oral side, note the presence of thin cirri.
Fig. 4.
Cirrhitiara superba
, specimen BFLA4087, bell height 7 mm. (A-B) Lateral view. (C-D) Close up of bell margin, note cirri (arrow in C).
Fig. 5.
Cirrhitiara superba
, specimen observed in 2018 but not collected. The cirri are barely visible.
The obtained 16S sequence did not cluster with any other genus of
Pandeidae
for which there were sequences available (
Fig. 8
), but this is due to the poor resolving power of the 16S marker above the genus level.
Remarks:
Cirrhitiara superba
has only rarely been reported. The identity of the present material is beyond doubt as it matches very well the descriptions in
Mayer (1900
,
1910
). Moreover, it comes from the same region and the same continental shelf region as the
type
material.
Thiel (1938)
identified a small (
1 mm
) juvenile medusa from
Brazil
as
C. superba
. His specimen had eight tentacles, the interradial ones being less developed. There were also 8 to (?) 16 rudimentary bulbs, each with a lateral cirrus. The presence of interradial tentacles – even less developed – argues against this being
C. superba
.
Neither
Mayer (1900
,
1910
) nor we observed interradial tentacles in
C. superba
.
Vanhöffen (1913a)
, who had mostly young medusae obtained from Mayer, speaks of 8 tentacles in his largest medusae, but he was likely referring to both
types
of tentacles,
viz.
four large ones and four cirri.
Kramp (1953)
thought that two medusae collected near the eastern coast of
Australia
belonged to
C. superba
despite they lacked cirri. Additionally, the interradial bulbs were larger than the adradial ones and no ocelli were observed. This makes the identification rather doubtful. The medusae are perhaps referable to
Leuckartiara fujianensis
Huang, Xu, Lin & Qiu, 2008
or
Leuckartiara neustona
Xu & Huang, 2004
.
The medusa shown in
Van der Spoel & Bleeker (1988
: fig. 8) originating from
Indonesia
had thick cirri and 8 long tentacles and thus unlikely belong to the present species.
Distribution:
Florida,
Bahamas
(
Mayer, 1910
). Records from
Brazil
(
Thiel, 1938
), north-eastern
Australia
(
Kramp, 1953
), and
Indonesia
(
Van der Spoel & Bleeker, 1988
) are likely misidentifications (see above).
Type
locality:
USA
,
Florida
, Dry
Tortugas
archipelago.