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
Protiaropsis anonyma
(
Maas, 1905
)
Fig. 12
A-C
Heterotiara anonyma
Maas, 1905: 19
, pl. 3 figs 19-21. –
Bigelow, 1909: 216
, pl. 41 figs 12-14. –
Vanhöffen, 1911: 211
,
pls 12-13. –
Bigelow, 1918: 382
. –
Bigelow, 1928: 287
. –
Russell, 1940: 516
, figs 5-7. –
Kramp, 1959a: 17
, 125
, fig. 131. –
Kramp, 1961: 122
. –
Kramp, 1965: 41
. –
Kramp, 1968: 53
, fig. 138. –
Schmidt, 1973: 22
. –
Schmidt & Klinker, 1974: 34
.
–
Bouillon, 1980: 314
. –
Brinckmann-Voss & Arai, 1989: 41
, figs 1b, 1e.
not
Heterotiara anonyma
. –
Bigelow, 1913: 25
, records North Pacific. [=
Bythotiara depressa
Naumov, 1960
]
in part
Heterotiara anonyma
. –
Arai & Brinckmann-Voss, 1980: 69
, fig. 40. [in part
Bythotiara depressa
Naumov, 1960
]
Protiaropsis anonyma
. –
Stechow, 1919: 150
, new combination. –
Schuchert, 2010: 338
.
?
Kanaka pelagica
Uchida, 1947: 103
, fig. 5.
–
Kramp, 1961: 123
. –
Kramp, 1968: 58
, fig. 153. –
Schmidt, 1973: 22
, could be a young
Heterotiara anonyma
. –
Bouillon, 1980: 316
, could be
Heterotiara anonyma
.
Examined material:
BFLA4037
;
1 specimen
;
26
-MAR-2019
; size
12 mm
high; part preserved in formalin and deposited as UF-013457, small part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528657
.
Observations:
Bythotiaridae
medusa
12 mm
high, bell cylindrical, not compressed laterally, mesoglea thick, especially apical jelly which is about 1/3 of the total bell height; bell margin with regular furrows in which lie the tentacles. Manubrium 2/3 the height of the subumbrella, shaped like inverted cone, section cross-shaped, interradial wall smooth, mouth cruciform, rather small, four red strands run along the interradial corners of the manubrium. Four thin radial canals, no mesenteries; circular canal thin. 10 tentacles, length about half the height of the bell, originating from under circular canals without formation of a distinct tentacle bulb but with an epidermal swelling at the junction of tentacle and circular canal, proximal part of tentacles curving adnate around bell margin in furrows, tapering only slightly distally, ending in bright orange, spherical to ovoid knob, diameter about 0.3 mm. No ocelli.
16S Data:
A blastn search in GenBank with the sole 16S (
MW528657
) gave mostly species of
Filifera
/
Anthoathecata
, but all below 90% identity and thus precluding any conclusions on relationships.
Distribution:
Widespread in warm parts of the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans, usually in depths of
0 to 600 m
(
Arai & Brinckmann-Voss, 1980
; corrections in Brinckmann-Voss & Arai, 1989).
Type
locality:
Indonesia
,
0.2933°S
,
129.2418°E
,
0-1000 m
depth.
Fig. 12.
Protiaropsis anonyma
,
specimen BFLA4037, bell height 12 mm. (A) Lateral view of animal with amphipod prey in its stomach. (B) Manubrium at other angle, note cruciform base. (C) Bell margin.
Remarks:
Most illustrations of this species do not show the terminal swellings of the tentacles (e.g. in
Kramp, 1959a
,
1968
), a typical character of
Bythotiaridae
medusae. These are almost invariably lost in specimens caught with a plankton net, but they are normally present in this species (see
Kramp, 1948
,
1965
;
Schmidt, 1973
;
Arai & Brinckmann-Voss, 1980
).
The size of the examined medusa was at the lower end of the range usually given for this species (
12-20 mm
,
Maas, 1905
;
Bigelow, 1909
;
Vanhöffen, 1911
).
Bigelow (1918)
also found somewhat smaller (up to
13 mm
) in the nearby
Bermuda
region, likewise
Bouillon (1980)
in animals from
Papua New Guinea
.
The interradial red strands are rather conspicuous in the living and preserved animal (
Fig. 12
A-B), but they have been mentioned only rarely so far. Only
Vanhöffen (1911)
observed them in an animal caught near the Nias Islands (
Indonesia
).
The nematocysts have been described by
Russell (1940)
and
Bouillon
et al.
(1988a)
. The species has large desmonemes which are typical for the family
Bythotiaridae
.
The taxonomic scope of
Protiaropsis anonyma
is not yet fully clear as there are other similar species, some of which which could prove to be conspecific (see also discussions in
Schmidt, 1973
).
Protiaropsis minor
(
Vanhöffen, 1911
)
is somewhat smaller (
6-12 mm
), has perhaps a shorter manubrium, and 16 to 24 tentacles (see description by
Pagès
et al.
, 1992
).
Bouillon
et al
. (1988a)
found both morphotypes in sympatry and kept them distinct.
Kanaka pelagica
Uchida, 1947
has eight tentacles but is much smaller (1.8 mm). It was based on a single specimen which was likely a juvenile.
Kramp (1953)
thought it might belong to
P. minor
, while
Schmidt (1973)
and
Bouillon (1980)
think it is referrable to
Protiaropsis anonyma
.
Gymnogonium zhengzhongii
Xu & Huang, 1994
, is small (2.2 mm), has a short manubrium, and a pair of branched radial canals, resulting in six canals in total. The manubrium of the only observed specimen had gonads.
Bouillon
et al.
(2006: 182)
thought that it could belong to
Protiaropsis anonyma
. As the the species is based on a single specimen, it cannot be excluded that the branched radial canals were a developmental aberration. New material has to prove the validity of the species, but as the
type
specimen was apparently mature at 2.2 mm, the genus and species should be retained as valid for the moment.
Bouillon (1980)
thought that also
Bythotiara depressa
Naumov, 1960
could be conspecific with
P. anonyma
as he found intermediate forms.
Bythotiara depressa
differs from
P. anonyma
in having an irregularly folded surface of the gonads. Brinckmann-Voss & Arai (1989) examined the problem in detail and they worked out diagnostic differences of the two species (see also
Xu
et al.
, 2016
). Some of the previous records of
P. anyonyma
from colder waters of the North Pacific Ocean were actually
B. depressa
.
All these ambiguities underline the need for a comprehensive dataset of 16S DNA barcodes which will hopefully improve the species delimitations.