TRIPEDALIIDAE Conant, 1897
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1080/00222933.2012.717645 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6AFA1E11-810D-4829-8751-A65D41FAF3EC |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/0390350A-FFB0-DF2A-FE3D-1332FEC191A7 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
TRIPEDALIIDAE Conant, 1897 |
status |
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Family TRIPEDALIIDAE Conant, 1897 View in CoL
A single pedalium per bell corner................... Genus Copula ( Figures 2C View Figure 2 , 3D View Figure 3 )
Two or three pedalia per bell corner................ Genus Tripedalia ( Figure 3E, J View Figure 3 )
Copula Bentlage et al., 2010 View in CoL . Type species: Carybdea sivickisi Stiasny, 1926 , by original designation. Species: Copula sivickisi (Stiasny, 1926) View in CoL .
Tripedalia Conant, 1897 View in CoL . Type species: Tripedalia cystophora Conant, 1897 View in CoL , by original designation. Species: Tripedalia binata Moore, 1988 View in CoL ; T. cystophora Conant, 1897 View in CoL .
Geographic distribution of the family
Global; tropical; neritic.
Remarks
Tripedaliidae View in CoL previously comprised only one genus, Tripedalia View in CoL , and was immediately recognizable because both species of Tripedalia View in CoL possess more than one pedalium per corner of the swimming bell (two in T. binata View in CoL and three in T. cystophora View in CoL ). Bentlage et al. (2010), however, determined that Copula sivickisi View in CoL (previously Carybdea sivickisi ) forms a monophyletic clade with Tripedalia View in CoL and so changed the diagnosis of the family to accommodate C. sivickisi . The present diagnosis of the family pertains to characters that are mainly visible in mature specimens. Tripedaliidae View in CoL , according to Bentlage et al. (2010), contains all those carybdeids that display sexual dimorphism of the gonads, produce spermatophores, and in which at least the males possess sub-gastric sacs/seminal vesicles (details in Hartwick 1991). These characters are important in the reproduction of tripedaliids. Species of Tripedaliidae View in CoL engage in courtship behaviour, unusual among cnidarians, that involves coupling and the active transfer of a spermatophore from the male to the female ( Werner 1973; Hartwick 1991; Lewis and Long 2005; Lewis et al. 2008). Tripedaliids have wide geographic distributions ranging from the Indo-Pacific (e.g. Moore 1988; Hartwick 1991; Lewis et al. 2008) to the Atlantic, including the Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean (e.g. Marques et al. 1997; Migotto et al. 2002; Coates 2003; Orellana and Collins 2011). Because of the small size of these species (<1 cm to about 2 cm bell height) and their neritic habitat, it is likely that several cryptic species remain to be discovered in these genera.
Descriptions of non-Australian Carukiidae View in CoL
Here we describe specimens of carukiid species that were collected from the Philippines and Japan. The following abbreviations were used throughout the descriptions. National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, USA: USNM; Bell height in mm: BH (measured from velarial turn-over to the apex of the swimming bell); interradial bell width in mm: IRW; nematocyst capsule length: L; nematocyst capsule width: W.
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TRIPEDALIIDAE Conant, 1897
Bentlage, Bastian & Lewis, Cheryl 2012 |
Copula
Bentlage 2010 |
Tripedalia binata
Moore 1988 |
T. binata
Moore 1988 |
Carybdea sivickisi
Stiasny 1926 |
Carybdea sivickisi
Stiasny 1926 |
C. sivickisi
Stiasny 1926 |
Tripedalia
Conant 1897 |
Tripedalia cystophora
Conant 1897 |
T. cystophora
Conant 1897 |
Tripedaliidae
Conant 1897 |
Tripedalia
Conant 1897 |
Tripedalia
Conant 1897 |
T. cystophora
Conant 1897 |
Tripedalia
Conant 1897 |
Tripedaliidae
Conant 1897 |
Tripedaliidae
Conant 1897 |