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Silicularia rosea

Silicularia rosea

Meyen, 1834

GBIF:127669507

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Descriptions(3)

Remarks. The present material from Chile was compared with that described earlier by one of us from Tristan da Cunha (Galea 2010 a). The most striking difference is to be found in the comparatively larger size of the South- American material (Table 2). The hydrothecae in these specimens exhibit nearly the same shape, but at a different scale, and their cnidome composition appears uniform within the genus 3. However, the female gonothecae from Tristan da Cunha are swollen basally and taper gradually towards the aperture, while those from Chile have the lateral walls nearly parallel throughout. In addition, their size differences are striking (compare Fig. 1 N and 1 Q), and this feature is also displayed by the male gonothecae (compare Fig. 1 O and 1 R). On one hand, the Chilean material corresponds to the illustration of the type of Silicularia rosea Meyen, 1834 given by Hartlaub (1905), as well as to Hypanthea aggregata Allman, 1888, H. georgiana 4 Pfeffer, 1889, and H. repens Allman, 1876. Consequently, we assign the present material to Meyen’s species, and consider the three other nominal species as conspecific. On the other hand, the Tristan da Cunha specimens seem indistinguishable from the nominal species Hypanthea atlantica 5 Marktanner-Turneretscher, 1890, in both morphology and size (Table 2), and are also probably conspecific with H. hemisphaerica Allman, 1888 from the Falkland Islands. The Gough Island material assigned by Ritchie (1907) to S. hemisphaerica also agrees in size with the Tristan da Cunha specimens. Owing to the smaller size of the Atlantic material, and the differences in shape exhibited by their female gonothecae, it seems justifiable to allocate them to a species different from S. rosea, in this case to S. hemisphaerica (Allman, 1888), the latter being the oldest available name.
Galea, Horia R., Schories, Dirk, Försterra, Günter, Häussermann, Verena (2014): New species and new records of hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Chile. Zootaxa 3852 (1): 1-50, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3852.1.1
Distribution in Chile. The present record from Los Gemelos is the first for the country. World records. Silicularia rosea occurs circumglobally in Antarctic and subantarctic waters (Vervoort & Watson 2003).
Galea, Horia R., Schories, Dirk, Försterra, Günter, Häussermann, Verena (2014): New species and new records of hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Chile. Zootaxa 3852 (1): 1-50, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3852.1.1
Material examined. HF 9, Los Gemelos, lat. - 54.91942, long. - 67.36308, 14. xii. 2010, 0 m, sample C 066: female colony on fragment of Macrocystis pyrifera (MHNG-INVE- 86240); 15. xii. 2010, 13 m, sample C 131: male colony on fragment of M. pyrifera (MHNG-INVE- 86239). Tristan da Cunha, Stonyhill Point, lat. - 37.17130, long. - 12.26315, 23. ii. 2005, 15 – 44 m: small male and female colonies of S. hemisphaerica (Allman, 1888) on pieces of M. pyrifera (NHM 2009.26).
Galea, Horia R., Schories, Dirk, Försterra, Günter, Häussermann, Verena (2014): New species and new records of hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Chile. Zootaxa 3852 (1): 1-50, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3852.1.1

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FIGURE 1. A, B: Hebella cf. scandens (Bale, 1888) — hydrotheca (A); gonotheca (B). C ‒ D: Hebella striata Allman, 1888 — hydrotheca (C); gonotheca (D). E, G, H: Phialella? falklandica Browne, 1902 — portion of erect stem (E) compared with that of P. quadrata (Forbes, 1848) (F); gonotheca seen laterally (G) and apically (H), compared with those of P. quadrata (I, stolonal; J, borne of stem). K, L: Silicularia? bilabiata (Coughtrey, 1876) — two hydrothecae (K); female gonotheca (L). M ‒ O: Silicularia rosea Meyen, 1834 — two hydrothecae (M) compared with specimens from Tristan da Cunha assigned to S. hemisphaerica (Allman, 1888) (P); female (N) and male (O) gonothecae, compared to homologous gonothecae (Q and R, respectively) from Tristan. S: Halecium corrugatissimum Trebilcock, 1828 — small stem with female gonotheca. Scale bars: 300 µm (A, B, E, F, S), 500 µm (C, D, G ‒ J), and 1 mm (K ‒ R).

Imageimage/png© Galea, Horia R.;Schories, Dirk;Försterra, Günter;Häussermann, VerenaGalea, Horia R.;Schories, Dirk;Försterra, Günter;Häussermann, Verena

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New species and new records of hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Chile

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Galea, Horia R., Schories, Dirk, Försterra, Günter, Häussermann, Verena (2014): New species and new records of hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Chile. Zootaxa 3852 (1): 1-50, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3852.1.1

Abstract

A large collection of shallow-water hydroids from various Chilean provinces, ranging from Taltal (25° S) in the North, to the Strait of Magellan (53° S) in the South, was studied, and a total of 30 species are discussed in the present report. Of these, eleven are new to science: Candelabrum valdiviensis, Halecium erratum, H. humeriformis, H. maximum, H. modestum, H. platythecum, Hydrodendron chilense, Sertularella asymmetra, S. curta, S. pauciramosa, and Symplectoscyphus semper. The nominal species Halecium flexile Allman, 1888, included for many decades in the synonymy of H. delicatulum Coughtrey, 1876, is resurrected based on distinctive features displayed by its newly discovered female gonothecae. A thorough discussion is provided on several morphologically related species of the genus from various localities around the world, and data on the nematocyst complement are emphasized, allowing the distinction of an as yet undescribed species, H. tristaniensis, from Tristan da Cunha, South Atlantic, and the resurrection of H. balei Fraser, 1911 from southern Australia. Halecium tehuelchum (d’Orbigny, 1842), a poorly known species considered as of doubtful validity, is redescribed based on fertile material of both sexes. A discussion on the taxonomy of several members of the genus Hydrodendron Hincks, 1874, including the first comprehensive account of their cnidome, is provided. The male and female gonothecae of Halopteris plumosa Galea & Schories, 2012 are described for the first time. A discussion on the genus Silicularia Meyen, 1834 is provided, and three subantarctic species are provisionally recognized based on the material in hand, viz. S. bilabiata (Coughtrey, 1875), S. rosea Meyen, 1834, and S. hemisphaerica (Allman, 1888). Four hydroids are new records for Chile: Halecium corrugatissimum Trebilcock, 1928, Parascyphus simplex (Lamouroux, 1816), Symplectoscyphus unilateralis (Lamouroux, 1824), and Aglaophenia divaricata Busk, 1852, the last two being accompanied by comments on their synonymy. Two additional hydroids are only tentatively identified, viz. Hebella cf. scandens (Bale, 1888) and the allusive benthic stage of Phialella falklandica (Browne, 1902).

Key words: Hydrozoans, taxonomy, new species, South America, southeastern Pacific

Galea H R, Schories D, Försterra G, Häussermann V, plazi (2014). New species and new records of hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Chile. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3852.1.1 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-18.

CC0Published 12/31/2014View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
127669507
Dataset Key
2fb83006-f93c-4492-aed0-f5f0707f553e
Origin
source
Backbone Key
5186145
Taxon ID
03D92A2C4761FFD1FF5185155835A332.taxon
Last Crawled
6/11/2026
Last Interpreted
6/11/2026