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Octophialucium irregularis

Octophialucium irregularis

Peter, 2021

GBIF:190510770

0year

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Descriptions(4)

Description: Bell diameter 8 - 12 mm for animals with gonads, bell rather shallow, apical jelly about half of height and subumbrella relatively shallow, soft walls and rim deformed easily. Velum narrow. Manubrium cross-section like a multi-rayed star (Fig. 45 A-C, G), as many rays as radial canals, multirayed outline present from base to mouth, diameter narrowing towards mouth, mouth with about eight lips. Occasionally a secondary manubrium may be present. Radial canals 7 - 9, originating from manubrium rays, initially broad and then tapering, sometimes also one incomplete centrifugal canal present that does not reach circular canal. Arrangement of radial canals irregular, some irregularly curved, branching once, sometimes coalescing again or fusing with other radial canals, general appearance very variable, irregular, and disordered (Fig. 45 A, D, G, F). Gonads arise in middle region of complete radial canals, oblong, slightly pendant (Fig. 45 C), fully developed state unknown. Circular canal thin, in larger animals with incomplete centripetal canals arising from non-perradial bulbs, reaching about to mid-subumbrella height (Fig. 45 D). Tentacles 27 to 30, on ovoid marginal bulbs which taper rapidly into thin tentacles, these often neatly coiled when contracted (Fig. 45 E); bulbs with adaxial excretory papilla pointing into subumbrella, size variable, sometimes relatively large (Fig. 45 C). Between tentaculate bulbs 1 to 3 smaller bulbs with very short tentacle (Fig. 45 E) or without tentacle. Between successive marginal bulbs 1 to 3 closed statocysts with 2 statoliths (Fig. 45 D-E). Colours: orange gastrodermis of tentaculate marginal bulbs, gonads orange; manubrium in younger stages transparent green (Fig. 45 G), later whitish, sometimes at base in interradial position orange (Fig. 45 A) or a weak interradial, brown pigment band from base to mouth (Fig. 45 C). 16 S Data: The seven specimens gave all an identical 16 S sequence. The single haplotype (MW 528701) was used in a blastn search in GenBank and gave as best match with 93 % identity an Octophialucium indicum from New Zealand (AY 787897). The pairwise identities with the 16 S of O. aphrodite were lower, about 88 %. A maximum likelihood tree using a wide selection of leptomedusae did not yield any well supported relationship (tree not shown).
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
Fig. 45 A-G
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: There are currently 11 accepted species of Octophialucium (Schuchert, 2020). In terms of size and tentacle numbers, the new species resembles only Octophialucium mollis Bouillon, 1984 b, a species known from the tropical Western Pacific Ocean. Octophialucium mollis is also the only Octophialucium species that has centripetal canals. Octophialucium irregularis differs from O. mollis in the following aspects: it lacks the interradial rows of black spots on the manubrium wall (although in some there is a faint brown band, see Fig. 45 C), the centripetal canals are longer, and the radial canals are very irregular in appearance and number. The latter feature is the most characteristic trait of this species and its specific epithet irregularis is intended to reflect this. This irregular organisation is likely not only due to genetic factors, but – as irregularities of the bell margin suggest (Fig. 45 A, G) – also due to repeated damage and subsequent regeneration.
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
Holotype: BFLA 4290; observed and collected 19 - DEC- 2019; size 12 mm, with incipient gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as UF- 013843, part preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction (MHNG- INVE- 0137379); 16 S sequence MW 528701. Other material: BFLA 3829; 1 specimen; 15 - NOV- 2018; size 4 mm, juvenile; preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16 S sequence identical to MW 528701. – BFLA 3838; 1 specimen; 19 - NOV- 2018; size 7 mm, without gonads; preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16 S sequence identical to MW 528701. – BFLA 4131; 1 specimen; 11 - JUN- 2019; size 12 mm, without gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as UF- 013807, part preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16 S sequence identical to MW 528701. – BFLA 4259; 1 specimen; 30 - NOV- 2019; size 8 mm, incipient gonads; part preserved in formalin and deposited as UF- 013838, much damaged, part preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16 S sequence identical to MW 528701. – BFLA 4311; 1 specimen; 15 - JAN- 2020; size 5 mm, no gonads; preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16 S sequence identical to MW 528701. – BFLA 4377; 1 specimen; 18 - MAR- 2020; size 6 mm, no gonads; preserved in alcohol for DNA extraction; 16 S sequence identical to MW 528701.
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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Fig. 45. Octophialucium irregularis n. spec. (A) Holotype, BFLA4290, aboral view, 12 mm diam. (B) BFLA4290, lateral view of manubrium. (C) BFLA4259, 8 mm, partial lateral view, arrow points to excretory papilla. (D) BFLA4259, oral view, arrow points to centripetal canal. (E) BFLA4259, bell margin, lateral view. (F) BFLA4131, 12 mm diameter, aboral view, arrow points to secondary manubrium. (G) BFLA3838, 7 mm oral view, arrow points to incomplete centrifugal canal.

Imageimage/png© Schuchert, Peter;Collins, RichardSchuchert, Peter;Collins, Richard

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Hydromedusae observed during night dives in the Gulf Stream

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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 2026-06-18.

CC0Published 10/21/2021View dataset
GBIF Usage Key
190510770
Dataset Key
172fa5c5-c0c4-4bd7-b710-d608237b8458
Origin
source
Backbone Key
11373283
Taxon ID
D0118A7C5B460058FECAFBD2FEFF79B9.taxon
Last Crawled
6/9/2026
Last Interpreted
6/9/2026