Revision of Beroidae (Ctenophora) in the southern seas of Europe: systematics and distribution based on genetics and morphology
Author
Shiganova, Tamara A.
Author
Abyzova, Galina A.
text
Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society
2022
2021-08-21
194
297
322
journal article
2869
10.1093/zoolinnean/zlab021
9ad2cd5f-60d4-4c02-819f-fea89dda74f7
0024-4082
5799206
A93B7D7A-1F8E-4E59-B86D-67814E01F797
GENUS:
BEROE
BROWNE, 1756
Representatives of
Beroida
and Cydipida are presumed to be the most primitive species among the Ctenophora because of the absence of a transmission stage, like true larva, which exist in the Orders
Lobata, Cestida and Platyctenida
(Aggasiz, 1865;
Greve
et al.
, 1976
;
Harbison 1985
;
Podar
et al.
2001
). The phylogeny of ctenophores is still controversial and
Simion
et al.
(2015)
have suggested that
Beroe
is perhaps not monophyletic. All representatives of
Beroe
have an oval or conical body shape beginning from the aboral part and a wide-flaring mouth with a large stomodeum. They have eight meridional and two paragastral canals that originate from the funnel and extend down to the middle of the broad sides of the body. Inside the mouth of the
Beroida
, macrocilia are located. They are finger-shaped, compound, ciliary organelles (
Horridge, 1965
;
Harbison & Madin, 1982
;
Tamm, 1982
). A single macrocilium contains hundreds or thousands (depending on the species) of hexagonally packed 9 + 2 axonemes, organized into many parallel rows (
Tamm & Tamm, 1993
). Most
Beroe
species
are pink, especially along the meridional canals and comb-rows. All
Beroe
species
are highly luminescent and flashing with blue-green light along the comb rows. Most of them are simultaneous hermaphrodites, capable of self-fertilization (
Mianzan, 1999
).