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
Aequorea neocyanea
new name
Fig. 38
A-I
Zygodactyla cyanea
L.
Agassiz, 1862: 361
. [not
Aequorea cyanea
de Blainville, 1834
]
Zygodactyla cyanea
. –
Agassiz, 1865: 107
, fig. 159. –
Haeckel, 1879: 227
. –
Mayer, 1900: 60
, pl. 11 fig. 23 & 23a, pl. 15 figs 33-34. –
Mayer, 1904: 17
, pl. 3 figs 16-17.
in part
Aequorea forskalea
. –
Mayer, 1910: 325
,
Z. cyanea
as synonym.
?
Mesonema coelum-pensile
. –
Vanhöffen, 1913a: 425
, fig. C.
?
Aequorea macrodactyla
. –
Nogueira
et al
., 2016
: fig. 1. [not
Aequorea macrodactyla
(
Brandt, 1835
)
]
Material examined:
BFLA3783
;
1 specimen
;
18-SEP- 2018
; size
50 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013449
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528633
–
BFLA3822
;
1 specimen
;
25-OCT-2018
; size
40 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013427
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528634
.
–
BFLA3827
;
1 specimen
;
14-NOV-2018
; size
50 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013435
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528635
.
–
BFLA4043
;
1 specimen
;
01-APR-2019
; size
50 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013436
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528636
.
–
BFLA4082
;
1 specimen
;
07-MAY-2019
; size
55 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013787
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528669
.
–
BFLA4083
;
1 specimen
;
07-MAY-2019
; size
42 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013788
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528670
.
–
BFLA4085
;
1 specimen
;
07-MAY-2019
; size
60 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013789
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528671
.
–
BFLA4236
;
1 specimen
;
21-OCT-2019
; size
30 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013844
, part in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence
MW528689
.
–
BFLA4304
;
1 specimen
;
15-JAN-2020
; size
90 mm
, with gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as
UF-013881
, no tissue sample.
–
1 specimen
photographed
08-FEB-2017
, not collected; size
100 mm
, with developed gonads.
–
1 specimen
photographed
06-JUN-2020
, not collected; size
70 mm
, with developed gonads.
The formalin samples are mostly strongly fragmented and damaged.
Taxonomy:
In order to avoid a secondary homonymy with
Aequorea cyanea
de Blainville, 1834
, we propose here the replacement name
Aequorea neocyanea
for
Zygodactyla cyanea
L.
Agassiz, 1862
.
Zygonema
Brandt, 1838
is a synonym of
Aequorea
Péron & Lesueur, 1810
(
Ranson, 1949
) and Agassiz’
Z. cyanea
must be transferred to
Aequorea
.
Observations:
Typical
Aequorea
medusae, diameters of animals with well developed gonads
50 to 100 mm
, sizes of animals without gonads (juveniles) up to
30-40 mm
. Umbrella in fully grown animals relatively flat (
Fig. 38A
), about 1/4 of diameter, in younger ones more spherical. Stomach large, diameter 1/2 of bell diameter, with shallow jelly cone inside. Mouth rim with short fimbriae only (
Fig. 38G
), same number as radial canals, continued centrifugally as fine rib or streak on stomach and then as radial canal. Radial canals in mature animals 25 to 100, more commonly 60 to 80, lower number might also be due to regeneration from fragments. A few (2-4) incomplete radial canals growing centrifugally can be present, also irregularities like fusions or branching, but these likely of traumatic origin. Gonads along radial canals, spanning from almost the beginning to a short distance from circular canal (
Fig. 38
A-B), bilamellar, when fully developed large and hanging into subumbrella like a curtain, walls much folded or undulated (
Fig. 38A
). Fully formed tentacles 21 to 50, additionally some small ones or mere bulbs that will likely later also develop into tentacles. Observed ratios of radial canals to fully formed tentacles 1.0-3.0. Tentacles in life nearly always with a swollen base (
Fig. 38C, E, F, H
) degree of swelling is apparently modifiable and could depend on environment or physiological state as once the animal is preserved the swelling is much reduced (
Fig. 38I
). Regularly there is a faint abaxial keel, often emphasized or feigned by a whitish line on median of abaxial side (
Fig. 38E, F, H
) caused by an accumulation of nematocysts, this line only visible in living animals. In swollen bulbs abaxial side or keel often elongated into abaxial spur (
Fig. 38
A- D), in preserved material much less visible or absent. Excretory papillae absent, excretory pores could not be found reliably in the preserved material. Four or more statocysts (up to 14) between two tentacles or bulbs, 2-3 statoliths per statocyst. Colours: unpigmented, very well grown specimens with a pink hue.
Fig. 37. 16S maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of the genus
Aequorea
and related genera obtained with PhyML (GTR+G+I model) using about 600 bp positions of the mitochondrial 16S gene. Node-support values are bootstrap values of 100 pseudoreplicates (shown only if> 70%). Sequence labels start with the GenBank numbers (except for identical haplotypes) permitting the retrieval of more information. Red labels are new sequences from this study, for the taxa in bold either a voucher specimen or photos of it have been examined. Notes: *1) Unpublished, L. Leclère, pers. comm. *2) See Material & Methods. *3) Could be a misidentification. *4) Unpublished, A. Hosia & L. Martell, pers. comm., see Fig. 39A.
Fig. 38.
Aequorea neocyanea
new name. (A-C) BFLA4085, bell diameter 60 mm. (A) Oblique view from below. (B) Aboral view. (C) Bell margin with tentacles and their bulbs. (D) BFLA4083, bell diameter 42 mm, young animal with beginning gonad development. (E) BFLA4043, bell margin. (F) BFLA4236, bell margin, the green dots are not a pigment but likely due interference effects. (G) BFLA4236, mouth region with short fimbria. (H) BFLA3783, bell margin. (I) BFLA3783, tentacles after fixation in formalin.
16S data:
The eight haplotypes had a range of divergences of 0.3-2.1 % (
Table 1
, intrapopulation variation). A maximum likelihood tree of the partial 16S sequence (
Fig. 37
) yielded a diverse but welldefined clade for this species. Its sister clade comprises two samples from the Mediterranean diverging in 3.7- 5.2% of their aligned bases (see discussion below). No relationship to
A. forskalea
nor to
A. macrodactyla
is evident though.
Distribution:
Florida,
Bermuda
, perhaps also
Brazil
and even Mediterranean (see below).
Type
locality: Atlantic Ocean,
USA
,
Florida
, Key West.
Remarks:
We think that the present material most likely belongs to the same species identified by
Mayer (1900
,
1904
) as
Zygodactyla cyanea
,
although there are some differences.
Zygodactyla cyanea
was first described by L.
Agassiz (1862)
based on animals from Key West, Florida. His brief description was later expanded (A.
Agassiz, 1865
) and a figure of a fully-grown animal provided.
Agassiz (1865)
reported it in great numbers along the Florida Reef.
Mayer (1900
,
1904
) then added more details using material from Florida and
the Bahamas
, notably also figures of the tentacle bulbs and of younger stages. As Mayer was a collaborator of A. Agassiz, his identification was certainly discussed with the latter. In his 1910 monograph, Mayer then synonymized
Z. cyanea
with
Aequorea forskalea
Péron & Lesueur, 1810
without further discussion.
Our material matches more
Z. cyanea
of
Mayer (1900
,
1904
) and not
A. forskalea
for the following reasons:
1) Mayer found it as very common off the coast of
Florida
and in our study it was likewise a frequent medusa.
Fig. 39.
Aequorea forskalea
.
(A) Living medusa from Norway, bell margin seen from oral side. Photo courtesy of Luis Martell, sample HYPNO 772. (B) Preserved sample from the Mediterranean, MHNG-INVE-0055261.
2) The
type
locality is in the same region and connected by the
Gulf
stream.
3) Mayer describes and depicts the tentacle bulbs with an abaxial spur, but incorrectly identified it as an exumbrellar excretory papilla (which is unknown in hydromedusae). This corresponds to the bulbs we found (
Fig. 38
), although this trait is not a unique diagnostic feature for the species as it occurs also in
Aequora
spec. 1
(see below) and others, e.g.
A. krampi
Bouillon, 1984
.
Aequorea forskalea
in current understanding has evenly tapering, not much swollen tentacle bases (
Fig. 39
).
4) The mature animals examined genetically had diameters of
5 to 6 cm
, a stomach width of 1/2 the bell diameter, and up to 100 radial canals, thus matching Agassiz’ and Mayer’s values.
There are also traits that do not match. Notably our maximum tentacle number was about 50 and the ratio of radial canals to tentacles usually in the region of 2. Mayer gives up to 100 tentacles and a ratio of 1. These traits are known to be very variable in this genus and should be used with caution to separate species. Moreover, we found that
Aequorea
medusae often get fragmented and then reconstituted themselves. This vegetative reproduction via fission could account for much of the variation seen in the
Aequorea
(see
Stretch & King, 1980
).
Contrary to
Mayer (1910)
, we think that Agassiz’ medusa should be kept distinct from
A. forskalea
. The 16S sequences of our material were different from
A. forskalea
of the NE Atlantic (
Fig. 37
), the bell sizes were smaller than for typical
A. forskalea
, and tentacles bases are usually swollen and may have an abaxial keel and spur.
The name
Aequorea forskalea
was introduced by
Péron & Lesueur, 1810
to replace the preoccupied name
Medusa aequorea
Forsskål, 1775
and they formally also restricted the
type
locality to the Mediterranean Sea.
Forsskål (1775)
provided a good illustration of his medusa which he had seen in the NE Atlantic or the Mediterranean and which we must assume to represent the
type
specimen. Forsskål’s medusa was quite large with a diameter of
23 cm
[in his Latin description he states “
Diameter spithamalis
”, a spithame being an ancient Greek/Byzantine length unit corresponding to
0.231 m
]. Our current scope of the species was outlined by
Russell (1953)
and
Kramp (1959a)
who give sizes of up to
175 mm
and 60-80 radial canals. The bases of the tentacles are almost invariably given as evenly tapering and not swollen (
Fig. 39
, see also
Kramp, 1959a
: fig. 234b). This is clearly different to the ones observed here (
Fig. 38
) but some cautionary remarks are necessary. The degree of inflation of the tentacle base, the keel formation, and the abaxial spur seem to be variable and a partly transient feature. The swelling depends perhaps on the activity of the animal, the osmotic situation, or the digestive cycle. In preserved animals it is much less pronounced (
Fig. 38I
), but still apparently different from
A. forskalea
.
The status of the closely related Mediterranean
Aequorea
samples (
Fig. 37
,
MW528733
and
MW528734
, see Material & Methods) is not clear. They were immature and
4 to 5 cm
in size and their tentacle bases resembled the ones shown in
Fig. 38E
and not
Fig. 39B
. It could be that they also belong to the present species. The
A. forskalea
of the Mediterranean also differentiate into two morphotypes when examined alive (unpublished observations): one with slender, evenly tapering tentacles as shown in
Fig. 39B
and another with much swollen bases of the bulbs resembling the ones shown in
Fig. 38
A-B.
The Brazilian medusae identified as
A. macrodactyla
by
Nogueira
et al
. (2016)
do not match well the latter species (see
Kramp, 1968
;
Schuchert, 2017a
) but conform much better with the scope of
A. neocyanea
as documented here.
The status of the Mediterranean
Aequorea
morphotypes as well as many other populations should be examined using genetic techniques.