Proboscidactyla gemmifera ( Fewkes, 1882 )

Schuchert, Peter & Collins, Richard, 2021, Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream, Revue suisse de Zoologie 128 (2), pp. 237-356 : 263

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.35929/RSZ.0049

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8382D1CA-7C0E-4B1C-9591-4CEAA2F296FB

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5718499

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D0118A7C-5B17-000F-FF17-FBF4FB377EA7

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Proboscidactyla gemmifera ( Fewkes, 1882 )
status

 

Proboscidactyla gemmifera ( Fewkes, 1882) View in CoL View at ENA

Fig. 15 View Fig A-F

Willia gemmifera Fewkes, 1882b: 300 , pl. 1 fig. 24.

Proboscidactyla gemmifera View in CoL . – Browne, 1905: 727.

Dyscannota gemmifera . – Mayer, 1900: 47, pl. 8 fig. 17.

Proboscidactyla ornata var. gemmifera View in CoL . – Mayer, 1910: 192, fig. 101a, pl. 21, figs 1-3.

Material examined: BFLA4285 ; 1 specimen; 06-DEC- 2019; size 3 mm, 19 tentacles, with medusa buds; preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence MW528699 View Materials . BFLA4321 ; 1 specimen; 24-JAN-2020; size 2.5 mm, 17 tentacles, with medusa buds; preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence identical to MW528699 View Materials . BFLA4338 ; 1 specimen; 07-FEB- 2020; size 3 mm, 18 tentacles, with medusa buds; preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16S sequence identical to MW528699 View Materials . – 24-JAN-2020; 1 specimen photographed, not collected; 3 mm, 14 tentacles, with medusa buds.

Observation: Medusae as described for P. ornata but somewhat smaller, 2.5-3 mm, though none of them appear sexually mature, tentacle numbers 14-19, more nematocyst patches on exumbrella, these often quite irregular and some not in linear arrays, no dark pigment in gastrodermis of tentacle bulbs. The most notable difference is the presence of four blastostyles ( Fig. 15C View Fig ) at each of the proximal-most branching points of the radial canals. Blastostyle resembling a polyp with one short capitate tentacle (visible in Fig. 15A, C View Fig ) and bearing one to several medusa buds of different development stages.

16S Data: See Table 1 View Table 1. 16 and Fig. 16 View Fig .

Distribution: NE Atlantic from Cape Hatteras to Florida, likely more widely spread but identifications are unreliable (see P. ornata ). Type locality: USA, North Carolina, Beaufort Inlet.

Remarks: Although the three samples used to obtain 16S sequence data were collected at different dates they all proved to be identical and clearly distinct from P. ornata ( Fig. 16 View Fig ). This clade seems to be about equally distant from P. ornata as it is from the Pacific P. flavicirrata Brandt, 1835 . This evident barcoding gap argues for it representing a distinct species.

The observed morphological differences to the sympatric P. ornata are listed above. It must be noted that P. gemmifera were found during the winter months, while the mature P. ornata were seen from March to June.

Proboscidactyla gemmifera was described based on a single medusa which was probably not fully developed as it had only eight tentacles ( Brooks, 1880; Fewkes, 1882b). Mayer (1900, 1910) later supplemented more detailed descriptions of more advanced specimens from Florida. These descriptions do not agree with our specimens concerning the position of the blastostyles. Fewkes and Mayer found them at the junction of the radial canal to the manubrium, while in our samples they were located at the first bifurcation of the radial canals ( Fig. 15A View Fig ). This is not necessary a significant difference. Kramp (1957, 1962) found the blastostyles in every possible position along the radial canals, this in various populations from the Pacifc (identified as P. ornata ). He regarded this variation as without any systematic importance.

Uchida & Sugiura (1975) examined the medusa bud development in a Japanese form of P. ornata and found that the position of the blastostyles is variable, depending on the developmental age (size) of the medusa. Smaller ones had them at the corners of the stomach, larger ones at the branching points. They also found that sexually mature medusae can continue budding medusae.

Although with some hesitation, we therefore referred our medusae to Proboscidactyla gemmifera .

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Hydrozoa

Order

Anthoathecata

Family

Proboscidactylidae

Genus

Proboscidactyla

Loc

Proboscidactyla gemmifera ( Fewkes, 1882 )

Schuchert, Peter & Collins, Richard 2021
2021
Loc

Willia gemmifera

Mayer A. G. 1910: 192
Browne E. T. 1905: 727
Mayer A. G. 1900: 47
Fewkes J. W. 1882: 300
1882
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