AnimaliaNot EvaluatedacceptedspeciesAccepted
Chrysaora kynthia

Chrysaora kynthia

GBIF:119358936

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Descriptions(6)

Description. Bell flatter than a hemisphere, retained specimens to 112 mm BD, but reported to 200 mm (Marsh 1986). Exumbrella finely granulated with microscopic transparent warts throughout and extending onto lappets, or concentrated in center, lacking peripherally, appearing smooth to naked eye. Subumbrella smooth over radial gastric pouches, possessing microscopic, scattered, transparent warts over manubrium and oral arms. PLATE 1. Chrysaora kynthia, sp. nov., in life. Tentacles 24 (reported variable to 32 by Marsh and Slack-Smith 1986), in eight groups of three between adjacent rhopalia (Plate 2 A), laterally flattened throughout length; hollow, with inner core simple and ribbonlike, or pleated, resembling a non-enclosing row of honeycomb. Radial gastric pouches 16, of equal width at stomach, but tentacular pouches approximately twice as wide as rhopaliar pouches at margin (Plate 2 B). Gastric cirri attached to floor of stomach within looping of gonad. Radial gastric septa with smooth or jagged edges; with simple to elongated teardrop-shaped proximal terminus; straight throughout most of length, widening in outer quarter toward rhopalium, with distal terminus at midpoint of lappet between rhopalium and nearest tentacle. Rhopalia eight, four perradial and four interradial, on the end of long, finger-like base (Plate 2 C), within niche formed by adjacent lappets, open on the subumbrellar side; exumbrellar rhopalial cone wide, tapering, blind-ending over rhopalium. Marginal lappets 32, of equal size, evenly rounded. Oral arms four, perradial, approximately 1 – 2 x BD in length; simple, folded in half, with loosely crenulated margins. Manubrium short, approximately half BD in life. Subgenital ostia oblong, longer than width of corresponding radial gastric pouch. Gonads four, interradial, contained within subgenital ostia; delicate and lacy, lacking robustness; inverted W-shape, with ends looping back towards center of bell; serving as a partition between gastric and genital cavities. Color in life ghostly bluish-whitish, transparent to translucent, lacking any pigmentation or star pattern; preserved specimens colorless, slightly translucent, with pinkish gonads. PLATE 2. Chrysaora kynthia, sp. nov., holotype. A, subumbrellar view, in preserved state. (Scale = 5 mm). B, subumbrellar margin. C, rhopalium. (Scale = 0.5 mm).
Gershwin, Lisa-Ann, Zeidler, Wolfgang (2008): Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Zootaxa 1744: 1-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.274217
Diagnosis. Chrysaora with 24 tentacles, with inner core sometimes pleated; exumbrellar rhopalial cone wide, tapering, not open to rhopalium; radial gastric septa bent, not S-shaped; gonads delicate and inverted Wshaped; lacking any pigmentation or star pattern.
Gershwin, Lisa-Ann, Zeidler, Wolfgang (2008): Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Zootaxa 1744: 1-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.274217
Remarks. Chrysaora kynthia can easily be distinguished from its congeners by a total lack of pigmentation, by its delicate and lacy W-shaped gonads, easily visible through the body, and its blind-ending exumbrellar rhopaliar pits. The genus Chrysaora was recently reviewed by Gershwin and Collins (2002), in which C. kynthia was included as Chrysaora sp. # 1. Based on analysis of 20 characters, C. kynthia was part of an unresolved clade of 24 - tentacled species which grouped separately from those species with 40 tentacles, the latter often historically referred to the genus Dactylometra.
Gershwin, Lisa-Ann, Zeidler, Wolfgang (2008): Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Zootaxa 1744: 1-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.274217
Distribution. Chrysaora kynthia has been found from Rockingham to Perth, Western Australia, including, occasionally, the Swan River estuary, but it seems to be most commonly found near Woodman’s Point, Cockburn Sound, in the summertime. It is intriguing that, as a pelagic animal, it has not been reported farther north or south.
Gershwin, Lisa-Ann, Zeidler, Wolfgang (2008): Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Zootaxa 1744: 1-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.274217
Etymology. From the Greek “ Kynthia, ” the goddess of the moon (feminine, noun in apposition), in recognition of its lunar appearance. Stinging ability. According to Marsh and Slack-Smith (1986) this species is a severe stinger, producing general as well as local symptoms.
Gershwin, Lisa-Ann, Zeidler, Wolfgang (2008): Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Zootaxa 1744: 1-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.274217
Material examined. Holotype: WAM Z 9944, South Mole, Fremantle, WA, coll. K. Usher, at surface, 7. ii. 2000; male (BD 86.1 mm). Paratypes: WAM Z 4749, Hall Bank, Fremantle, WA, 30 – 40 feet, dead coral bank, 25. i. 1980; fragmented immature specimen (BD 47.5 mm). WAM Z 4750, Cockburn Sound, WA, coll. D. Parker, 25. ii. 1971; female (BD 112.1 mm). WAM Z 4751, City Beach, Perth area, WA, coll. D. Curry, 16. iii. 1985; 3 specimens in poor condition (BD 53.9, 72.4 & 83.7 mm). WAM Z 4752, washed ashore in shallows near Palm Beach, Cockburn Sound, WA, coll. A. Paterson, 27. xii. 1970; immature specimen (BD 70.5 mm). WAM Z 4753 & Z 4757, Woodman’s Groin, Cockburn Sound, WA, depth 1 m, coll. N. Coleman, 4. iii. 1972; two males (BD 106.4 & 95.5 mm). WAM Z 4754, Applecross, in Swan River Estuary, WA, coll. S. De la Hunty, 30. i. 1975; immature? male (BD 54.5 mm). WAM Z 4755, near Kwinana wreck, Cockburn Sound, WA, coll. L. Marsh, 16. i. 1980; male (BD 78.4 mm). WAM Z 4756, Woodman’s Point, Cockburn Sound, WA, coll. Science Teacher’s Association, 18. iii. 1972; male (BD 91.4 mm). WAM Z 4758, Palm Beach, Rockingham, Cockburn Sound, WA, coll. A. Paterson, Jan. 1971; female (BD 111.7 mm).
Gershwin, Lisa-Ann, Zeidler, Wolfgang (2008): Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Zootaxa 1744: 1-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.274217

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Source Information

Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Gershwin, Lisa-Ann, Zeidler, Wolfgang (2008): Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Zootaxa 1744: 1-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.274217

Abstract

A preliminary study of the scyphomedusae of southern Australian waters revealed the presence of several species new to science and some species previously unrecorded from the region (south of 30ºS). Atolla wyvillei is confirmed as belonging to the southern Australian fauna and A. vanhoeffeni and the genera Paraphyllina and Periphylla are recorded as new for the Australian region. Four species are described as new to science; Chrysaora kynthia, sp. nov., C. southcotti, sp. nov., C. wurlerra, sp. nov., and Desmonema scoresbyanna, sp. nov.

Key words: Southern Australia, scyphomedusae, Atolla, Paraphyllina, Periphylla, Chrysaora, Pelagia, Desmonema, new records, new species, taxonomy, nomenclature

Gershwin L, Zeidler W, plazi (2008). Some new and previously unrecorded Scyphomedusae (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from southern Australian coastal waters. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.274217 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-17.

CC0Published 12/31/2008View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
119358936
Dataset Key
927255e3-71ba-48d3-b594-f0bb3d28eccf
Origin
source
Backbone Key
6471853
Taxon ID
03A4EA4CFF98FFC267DBF483301AEE8F.taxon
Last Crawled
6/16/2026
Last Interpreted
6/16/2026