AnimaliaacceptedgenusAccepted
Aequorea

Aequorea

Peron & Lesueur, 1810

GBIF:190510752

0year

ABOUT

Descriptions(3)

Diagnosis: Medusa manubrium very wide, circular; no gastric peduncle, but often with jelly cone within stomach; subumbrella without radial rows of gelatinous papillae. With numerous, unbranched radial canals, new radial canals develop centrifugally from stomach base. Gonads on radial canals, separated from manubrium. Marginal tentacles hollow; usually with excretory pores or papillae on adaxial side of base; no marginal or lateral cirri; statocysts closed; no ocelli. Hydroid where known of ‘ campanulinid’ type, small usually lacking species-specific characters (see Bouillon et al., 2006).
Schuchert, Peter, Collins, Richard (2021): Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream. Revue suisse de Zoologie 128 (2): 237-356, DOI: 10.35929/RSZ.0049
Remarks: Aequorea is a difficult genus as can be suspected from the complex synonymy given above. A comprehensive revision of its species is needed (Purcell, 2018). Kramp (1961) plainly expressed “ The species are more or less doubtful. ” Russell (1953) had similar thoughts. However, both experts contributed much in consolidating and establishing a workable species level taxonomy which is still in use today. Dawson (2004) and Zheng et al. (2009, 2014) have begun to study species level systematics using DNA sequences, but we are still missing sequence data for many populations and species and their correlation with morphotypes. Here, we separated the species first using their 16 S data and then searched for suitable names that matched their morphology. A few photographs of fully grown medusae that were not sampled could afterwards also be attributed to nominal species. It seems, however, that the sequence data are not really congruent with described nominal species. While the species level diversity is higher than expected, it is also surprising that some have a much wider distribution than thought before [see also Pruski & Miglietta (2019) for A. australis and its occurrence in the Gulf of Mexico]. Some additional species were examined for this study to allow a better comparison and species delimitation. This material is listed above in the section Material and Methods.
Schuchert, Peter, Collins, Richard (2021): Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream. Revue suisse de Zoologie 128 (2): 237-356, DOI: 10.35929/RSZ.0049
type species Aequorea forskalea Péron & Lesueur, 1810 by subsequent designation by Mayer (1910).
Schuchert, Peter, Collins, Richard (2021): Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream. Revue suisse de Zoologie 128 (2): 237-356, DOI: 10.35929/RSZ.0049

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Source Information

Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream

checklist

This dataset contains the digitized treatments in Plazi based on the original journal article Schuchert, Peter, Collins, Richard (2021): Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream. Revue suisse de Zoologie 128 (2): 237-356, DOI: 10.35929/RSZ.0049

Abstract: Hydromedusae were photographed and collected during 75 night-time dives in the Gulfstream off Florida. Most of the collected material was used to obtain DNA extracts and subsequently to determine part of the mitochondrial 16S rRNA gene, a barcode marker preferentially used for hydrozoans. The morphological data and the 16S barcodes permitted us to identify 46 species and 6 additional species nameable only to the genus level. Photos and descriptions are provided for all of them and the taxonomy and species status discussed. Six new species are described: Pandeopsis prolifera n. spec., Zanclea mayeri n. spec., Corymorpha floridana n. spec., Staurodiscus luteus n. spec., Octophialucium irregularis n. spec., Solmaris flavofinis n. spec. The new family Wuvulidae is proposed for the genus Wuvula Bouillon, Seghers & Boero, 1988. The new name Aequorea neocyanea is introduced for Zygodactyla cyanea L. Agassiz, 1862 to avoid a secondary homonymy with Aequorea cyanea de Blainville, 1834. Zygodactyla cyanea was considered to be a synonym of Aequorea forskalea Péron & Lesueur, 1810 for most of the 20th century, but we present arguments that it should be kept distinct from the latter and it must be transferred to the genus Aequorea. The genus Otoporpa Xu & Zhang, 1978 is regarded here as congeneric with Pegantha Haeckel, 1879 and its type species Otoporpa polystriata Xu & Zhang, 1978 is therefore changed to Pegantha polystriata (Xu & Zhang, 1978) new comb. Dipleurosoma brooksii Mayer, 1910 is recognized as a new synonym of Staurodiscus kellneri (Mayer, 1910); Staurodiscus heterosceles Haeckel, 1879 as a new synonym of Staurodiscus tetrastaurus Haeckel, 1879; Orchistoma agariciforme Keller, 1884 and Tetracannota collapsum Mayer, 1900 both as new synonyms of Orchistoma pileus (Lesson, 1843). The following Indo-Pacific species are newly recorded for the Atlantic Ocean: Pandeopsis ikarii (Uchida, 1927), Aequorea taiwanensis Zheng et al., 2009; Zygocanna apapillatus Xu, Huang & Guo, 2014; Gastroblasta timida Keller, 1883; Cunina becki Bouillon, 1985; and Pegantha polystriata (Xu & Zhang, 1978). The 16S sequences also permitted us to discover several new links with polyp stages, this for Cirrhitiara superba (Mayer, 1900), Euphysilla pyramidata Kramp, 1955, Zancleopsis dichotoma, and Melicertissa mayeri Kramp, 1959. Detailed, high resolution photos of living medusae were found to be very useful for taxonomic purposes and are mostly preferable to preserved, damaged specimens obtained with plankton nets. Photos of living animals also permit us to better document material used to determine 16S barcodes and make the latter useable for taxonomic revisions.

Schuchert P, Collins R, felipe (2021). Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream. Plazi.org taxonomic treatments database. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.35929/rsz.0049 accessed via GBIF.org on 2026-06-16.

CC0Published 10/21/2021View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
190510752
Dataset Key
172fa5c5-c0c4-4bd7-b710-d608237b8458
Origin
source
Backbone Key
2267493
Taxon ID
D0118A7C5B370029FC44FBDCFF277D76.taxon
Last Crawled
6/9/2026
Last Interpreted
6/9/2026