Carybdea brevipedalia Kishinouye, 1891
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4543.4.3 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:EDFF0523-01DE-4F51-8499-ED82437EB049 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5943457 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B45208-FFE3-F01F-14B9-F8B6DDC49F9E |
treatment provided by |
Plazi |
scientific name |
Carybdea brevipedalia Kishinouye, 1891 |
status |
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Carybdea brevipedalia Kishinouye, 1891 View in CoL
Figs. 3 View FIGURE 3 A–E
Material examined: Three (3) adult specimens, from Aburatsubo Bay, Kanagawa ( Japan), collected by Sho Toshino, October 24, 2011; preserved in 5% formaldehyde solution. Two (2) specimens deposited in the Natural History Museum of Barcelona (Museu de Ciències Naturals de Barcelona), Spain (MZB 2015-1704).
One (1) adult specimen, female, from Shirahama, Wakayama ( Japan), collected by Shin Kubota, 1995.
Diagnosis: Gastric phacellae horizontal linear, gastric filaments multiple rooted, long stemmed; velarial canals 2 per octant; complexly branched; pedalial knee bend volcano-shaped, appendage with sharp peak.
Description: Adult medusa: Bell ( Fig. 3A View FIGURE 3 ), highly transparent, colourless, bell-shaped, regularly scattered with very small, colourless, equal-sized nematocyst warts, from apex to bell margin; apex convex, mesoglea thick, slight horizontal constriction near the top present. Bell height up to 35 mm high, bell width up to 33.5 mm (IPD).
Pedalia ( Fig. 3D View FIGURE 3 ), 4, simple, unbranched flattened, scalpel-shaped, approx. 1/3–1/2 bell height in length, situated in each interradial corner; outer wing scattered with very small, round warts, outer keel with irregularly shaped, white nematocyst bands; inner wing free of nematocyst warts, overhanging tentacle insertion; pedalium carrying single, white to flesh coloured tentacles in preserved specimens. Pedalial canal, diameter diamond shaped with sharp keels, flat and narrow at base, tapering below knee bend, flaring slightly towards mid-section, tapering towards distal end and flaring at tentacle insertion; going straight to slightly curved through pedalium, showing a slightly volcano-shaped to triangular knee bend with a sharp peak appended.
Rhopalia, 4, located inside heart-shaped rhopalial niche ostium heart shaped, with triangular covering scale with distinct volcano-shaped tip; few small, round nematocyst warts on scale; approx. 1/6 to 1/7 of bell height up from margin; rhopalium with 6 eyes (2 median lens eyes + 2 lateral slit eyes + 2 lateral pit eyes).
Velarium ( Fig. 3E View FIGURE 3 ), free of nematocyst warts, containing 2 velarial canal roots per octant, canals slim in width, seldom lobed, some side branches tend to grow in centripetal direction, rounded canal tips; canals roots flanking frenulum, giving rise to 2 main canals, 1st canal simple, slightly lobed, without additional side branches, 2nd main canal deeply forked into 2 branches with 0–2 additional side branches; canals roots flanking pedalia, giving rise to 1 main canal, deeply forked into 3 branches, with 0–2 additional side branches.
Manubrium (1/5 bell height in length), very short, four-lobed, cruciform with sharply pointed mouth arm tips, without nematocyst warts, connected to flat and shallow stomach; stomach communicates perradially with 4 gastric pockets leading into velarial canals.
Gastric phacellae ( Fig. 3B View FIGURE 3 ), 4, horizontal linear, in 4 stomach corners, consisting of 10–15 single, longstemmed, brush shaped filaments ( Fig. 3C View FIGURE 3 ) per quadrant.
Gonads, 4 pairs, arrowhead-shaped, (narrow at base, widening in the first third then tapering towards the upper end to a sharp peak) separated by unperforated interradial septum, extending from stomach rim to bell margin, tapering distinctly towards stomach rim and at rhopalial niche level, flaring towards marginal rim; sexes separated but unimorph; ripe gonads milky whitish to flesh coloured in preserved specimens.
Remarks: Bentlage et al. (2010), Bentlage & Lewis (2012), and Toshino et al. (2015) indicated that C. brevipedalia (formerly C. rastonii ) should be listed as the only species of the genus Carybdea inhabiting Japanese waters.
Reported distribution of C. brevipedalia : Japan
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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