Catablema multicirratum Kishinouye, 1910

Schuchert, Peter, 2018, DNA barcoding of some Pandeidae species (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Anthoathecata), Revue suisse de Zoologie 125 (1), pp. 101-127 : 118-120

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.1196029

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE406D-FFE2-E24C-FCF8-FDC8D83C1AB1

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Catablema multicirratum Kishinouye, 1910
status

 

Catablema multicirratum Kishinouye, 1910 View in CoL

Figs 12-13 View Fig View Fig

Catablema multicirrata Kishinouye, 1910: 24 View in CoL .

Catablema multicirrata View in CoL . ‒ Bigelow, 1913: 19, pl. 1 figs 4-7. ‒ Hartlaub, 1914: 321. ‒ Kramp, 1926: 91, pl. 2.‒ Uchida, 1927: 213. ‒ Uchida, 1933: 130 fig. 6. ‒ Uchida, 1940: 286. ‒ Uchida, 1969: 286. ‒ Arai & Brinckmann-Voss, 1980: 44, fig. 20. ‒ Wang et al., 2014: 99, fig. 12.

Catablema multicirratum View in CoL . – Kramp, 1961: 96. – Kramp, 1968: 50, fig. 133

Perigonimus multicirratus . – Naumov, 1969: 204, fig. 71.

Perigonimus breviconis View in CoL . – Naumov, 1969: 204, fig. 72. [not Neoturris breviconis ( Murbach & Shaerer, 1902) View in CoL ] Type locality: Paramushir Island , Kuril Islands, Pacific Ocean .

Material examined: 1 specimen, not in permanent collection; USA, Friday Harbor Laboratories , floating docks, 48.54514° -123.01206°, 0.5 m depth; collection date 19.05.2011; depicted in Fig. 12 View Fig ; DNA isolate 868; GenBank numbers of sequences see Table 1 View Table 1 . ‒ Tissue samples and photos of two medusae here identified as Catablema cf. multicirratum from north of Svalbard obtained from Aino Hosia (University Museum of Bergen); the rest of the medusae in the collections of the Bergen Museum. The collection data are given in Table 1 View Table 1 .

Diagnosis: Catablema medusa with umbrella height and diameter 30 to 65 mm including large dome-like apical projection corresponding to about half the total bell height. Manubrium with very broad, quadrangular base, long mesenteries, mouth margin variably folded, gonadal folds oblique to vertical, few or no pits. Mature animals with 80 to 160 tentacles, without or only few marginal bulbs between tentacles in adult specimens. Radial canals relatively short but very broad and with large, complex lateral outgrowths. No ocelli observed. Stomach and marginal bulbs light orange in living specimens.

Hydroid not known.

Remarks: Catablema multicirratum was somewhat inadequately described by Kishinouye (1910), with the sole diagnostic character distinguishing it from C. vesicarium being the tentacle number, given as “several hundreds.” This must certainly be erroneous. Bigelow (1913) then described and illustrated new material from the Bering Sea and the Gulf of Alaska. The species was subsequently also recorded from the west coast of Greenland by Kramp (1926). The Atlantic medusae were distinctly smaller, but had the same high number of tentacles. Although the species has been reported regularly (see Arai & Brinckmann-Voss, 1980; Wang et al., 2014), only a few specimens have been documented. It seems that it has sometimes also been confused with N. breviconis (e.g. Naumov, 1969). According to our current knowledge the tentacle number permits a reliable separation of C. vesicarium and C. multicirratum .

The Pacific specimen of Catablema multicirratum used for this study was identified based on Arai & Brinckmann-Voss (1980). The single animal was very large, reaching 6.5 cm in height ( Fig. 12 View Fig ) and had approximately 100 tentacles. It was thus easily separable from the Catablema vesicarium nodulosum ( Fig. 11 View Fig ) found at the same place. The two medusae from Svalbard ( Fig. 13 View Fig ) were smaller and had denser tissues with a darker orange colour than the Pacific specimen.

While morphologically separable, the status of the species remains somewhat problematic when using 16S, COI, and ITS sequence data. 16S and ITS sequences cannot be used to separate C. multicirratum from C. vesicarium ( Fig. 8 View Fig ; Table 2 View Table 2 ). COI has about three times higher divergence values than 16S and permits to discern somewhat more structure in the Catablema clade ( Fig. 9 View Fig ). The Pacific Catablema multicirratum separates from both, C. vesicarium and the Atlantic C. multicirratum . The Atlantic form is thus perhaps also an independent lineage and it was therefore named here C. cf. multicirratum .

The BOLD barcode database contains some additional COI sequences of Catablema samples, mostly identified as C. vesicarium . The origin of the material is from the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of Canada, but unfortunately the identifications are unreliable and the accompanying photos virtually useless. Due to the doubtful identities, these sequences were therefore not included in the analyses of this study. Adding nevertheless these sequences to the ML-analysis (results not shown), the results remain similar to the one shown in Fig. 9 View Fig . Catablema appears to be split into three clades with relatively low divergences: C. vesicarium , C. multicirratum , and Catablema from Svalbard.

However, it must be concluded that more Catablema samples with a thorough documentation and identification of the specimens are needed before any reliable conclusion is possible. Markers with more resolving power (e.g. microsatellites) might be necessary to settle the status of all nominal Catablema species. It is still possible that they all represent only different age groups and local variants.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Hydrozoa

Order

Anthoathecata

Family

Pandeidae

Genus

Catablema

Loc

Catablema multicirratum Kishinouye, 1910

Schuchert, Peter 2018
2018
Loc

Perigonimus multicirratus

Naumov D. V. 1969: 204
1969
Loc

Perigonimus breviconis

Naumov D. V. 1969: 204
1969
Loc

Catablema multicirratum

Kramp P. L. 1968: 50
Kramp P. L. 1961: 96
1961
Loc

Catablema multicirrata

Wang C. & Huang J. & Xiang P. & Wang Y. & Xu Z. & Guo D. & Lin M. 2014: 99
Arai M. N. & Brinckmann-Voss A. 1980: 44
Uchida T. 1969: 286
Uchida T. 1940: 286
Uchida T. 1933: 130
Uchida T. 1927: 213
Kramp P. L. 1926: 91
Hartlaub C. 1914: 321
Bigelow H. B. 1913: 19
1913
Loc

Catablema multicirrata

Kishinouye K. 1910: 24
1910
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