Leuckartiara longicalcar, Schuchert, 2018

Schuchert, Peter, 2018, DNA barcoding of some Pandeidae species (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Anthoathecata), Revue suisse de Zoologie 125 (1), pp. 101-127 : 120-123

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1196029

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03FE406D-FFE0-E249-FC32-FC9EDD1A1C87

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Plazi (2021-10-21 02:34:05, last updated 2024-11-26 23:39:19)

scientific name

Leuckartiara longicalcar
status

sp. nov.

Leuckartiara longicalcar View in CoL n. spec.

Figs 14 View Fig , 15 View Fig A-C, 16

in part Leuckartiara octona View in CoL . ‒ Mackie & Mackie, 1963: 68. [not L. octona ( Fleming, 1823) View in CoL ]

Leuckartiara species. ‒ Arai & Brinckmann-Voss, 1980: 56, fig. 30.

Holotype: MHNG-INVE-98638; female; USA, San Juan Island , Friday Harbor, 48.54514° -123.01206°, depth 0.5 m; collection date 20.05.2011; preserved in formalin, subsequently transferred to ethanol.

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Paratypes: MHNG-INVE-78922, 9 specimens; USA, San Juan Island, Friday Harbor , 48.54514° -123.01206°, depth 0.5 m ; collection date 20.05.2011; one specimen used to isolate DNA 869; for GenBank numbers of sequences see Table 1 View Table 1 . ‒ MHNG-INVE-82312, 2 specimens; Canada, British Columbia, Salish Sea , 49.2505° -123.74867°, depth 0-50 m; collected by Moria Galbraith ; preserved in formalin, subsequently transferred to ethanol.

Additional data: Several photographs of living medusae taken by Kevin Lee off the coast of Palos Verdes, California, USA, 33.8211° -118.4569°, one of the photos is reproduced here in Fig. 16 View Fig .

Etymology: From the Latin longus, long, and calcar, spur, referring to the long abaxial spurs of the tentacle bulbs.

Type locality: USA, San Juan Island , Friday Harbor, 48.54514°N 123.01206°W GoogleMaps .

Diagnosis: Leuckartiara medusa 15-20 mm total height, with large pointed apical process of about 1/3 to 2/5 of total bell height, umbrella higher than wide; up to 16-24 tentacles, between each tentacle pair 1-3 small, rudimentary bulbs, perradial and interradial tentacles with conspicuous, long, pointed abaxial spurs reaching up to 1/6 of the bell height; tentacles and bulbs lacking tentacles usually with small red abaxial ocelli. Manubrium about 1/2 of subumbrellar height, paleorange, with long mesenteries, mouth cruciform, mouth margin moderately ruffled. Gonads in adradial series of horizontal folds, distinct interradial connecting fold absent.

Description: Leuckartiara medusa up to 15-20 mm in height and about 10 mm in diameter when mature, with a large, pointed apical process of about 1/3 to 2/5 of total bell height, umbrella higher than wide. Interradial, subumbrellar pockets of variable size present.

Manubrium about half the height of the subumbrellar height, shaped like inverted vase, connected to radial canals via long mesenteries (about 1/3 of manubrium height). Manubrium base and mouth opening cruciform, mouth rim moderately ruffled.

Gonad tissue in 8 series of broad, adradial, horizontal folds, 8-12 folds in an adradial series, many folds with a central depression and resembling a loop or simply bifurcated ( Fig. 15A View Fig ). The two series of gonad folds of one quadrant usually not connected by a fold across the interradial region as in other congeners (thus without the H-form of the gonad folds, often described as “horse-shoe shape” in older publications, comp. Fig. 17C View Fig ). Sometimes an inconspicuous interradial connection of the two rows of folds may be present at the aboral end of the manubrium. No gonadal pits. Egg size about 0.1 mm. Radial canals slightly jagged and broad. Ring canal smooth, broad.

Tentacles usually 16, sometimes up to 24, between each tentacle pair 1-3 small, rudimentary bulbs without tentacles. Bases of tentacles laterally compressed, clasping bell margin. Perradial and interradial tentacle bases (oldest tentacles) with long, pointed abaxial spurs, reaching up to 1/6 of the bell height ( Fig. 15B View Fig ), shorter (younger) tentacles with short spur or no spur. Spurs appear solid, without internal canal. A small red ocellus present on most tentacles and also rudimentary bulbs, situated on abaxial side at interface of tentacle to exumbrella, in tentacles with long abaxial spurs ocelli at end of spur.

Colour: Manubrium pale orange, proximal parts of tentacles pale orange to yellowish, ocelli orange-red.

Nematocysts of tentacles microbasic heteronemes, ca. 4 x 7 μm.

Distribution: North-eastern Pacific, from Vancouver Island to Southern California.

Remarks: This species was described by Arai & Brinckmann-Voss (1980: 56) as Leuckartiara species distinct from L. octona . Dr Anita Brinckmann-Voss (pers. com., 2013) told me that she initially intended to name it in a subsequent publication, but was now unable to do it and encouraged me to do it myself.

Leuckartiara longicalcar does not match any of the known species ( Kramp, 1968; Pages et al., 1992; Xu & Huang, 2004; Schuchert, 2017). It has previously been misidentified as L. octona ( Fleming, 1823) and been considered related to L. zacae Bigelow, 1940 (see Arai & Brinckmann-Voss, 1980).

Leuckartiara octona is indeed similar in appearance, but lacks the long abaxial spurs and regularly has a fold across the interradial region connecting the adradial series of folds. The 16S and COI sequence data ( Figs 8-9 View Fig View Fig ) clearly separated L. longicalcar from the Atlantic L. octona , although they are closely related.

Leuckartiara zacae Bigelow, 1940 is a rare species first found in the Gulf of Panama. It is somewhat larger than L. longicalcar and has about the same number of tentacles. The most prominent difference is the length of the tentacle spurs: they are much longer and extend up to 2/3 of the bell height. Bigelow (1940) described them as exumbrellar ribs containing a thin gastrodermal canal. Additionally, L. zacae has no apical process (but Kramp (1965) observed a small process in a juvenile specimen from Indonesia, the identity of this material is perhaps questionable), the umbrella without the process is larger (21 versus 12 mm), the manubrium is more voluminous and has more gonadal folds. It is only known to occur in tropical seas ( Kramp, 1965).

Other Leuckartiara species with tentacle spurs are L. gardineri Browne, 1916 , L. acuta Brinckmann-Voss, Arai & Nagasawa, 2005 , and L. fujianensis Huang, Xu, Lin & Qiu, 2008 . All three have only four fully formed tentacles.

Kevin Lee (2017) published a series of magnificent photos of Leuckartiara medusae observed off Los Angeles, California. One of them is reproduced here ( Fig. 17 View Fig ). These medusae must clearly be referred to L. longicalcar n. spec. Some of the individuals are almost identical to the ones shown here, while others ( Fig. 17 View Fig ) appear somewhat larger, with up to 24 tentacles, and a more voluminous stomach. Some of the individuals have a more intense colour, appearing more reddish, and also the tentacle bases show some reddish pigments. The distribution of the species extends thus from Vancouver Island to Southern California.

Arai M. N., Brinckmann-Voss A. 1980. Hydromedusae of British Columbia and Puget Sound. Canadian Bulletin of Fisheries and Aquatic Sciences 204: 1 - 192.

Bigelow H. B. 1940. Eastern Pacific Expeditions of the New York Zoological Society. XX. Medusae of the Templeton Crocker and Eastern Pacific Zaca Expeditions, 1936 - 1938. Zoologica, N. Y. 25 (3): 281 - 321.

Brinckmann-Voss A., Arai M. N., Nagasawa K. 2005. Leuckartiara acuta (Hydrozoa, Anthoathecatae, Pandeidae), a new species from the Pacific. Publications of the Seto Marine Biological Laboratory 40 (3 - 4): 131 - 139.

Browne E. T 1916. Medusae from the Indian Ocean. Transactions of the Linnean Society of London, Zoology 17 (2): 169 - 209.

Fleming J. 1823. Gleamings of natural history, gathered on the coast of Scotland during a voyage in 1821. Edinburgh Philosophical Journal 8: 294 - 303.

Huang J. Q., Xu Z. Z., Lin J. Z., Qiu M. F. 2008. Three new species of Anthomedusae (Hydrozoa, Hydroidomedusae) from the Fujian sea water. Journal of Xiamen University Natural Science 47 (3): 408 - 412.

Kramp P. L. 1965. The hydromedusae of the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Dana Report 63: 1 - 162.

Kramp P. L. 1968. The hydromedusae of the Pacific and Indian Oceans. Sections II and III. Dana Report 72: 1 - 200.

Lee K. 2017. Leuckartiara spp. (?) Blue water dive, miles offshore Palos Verdes, California USA. Available at:

Mackie G. O., Mackie G. V. 1963. Systematic and biological notes on living hydromedusae from Puget Sound. Bulletin (National Museum of Canada). Biological series 199: 63 - 84.

Pages F., Gili J. M., Bouillon J. 1992. Medusae (Hydrozoa, Scyphozoa, Cubozoa) of the Benguela Current (southeastern Atlantic). Scientia Marina 56 (Suppl. 1): 1 - 64.

Xu Z. - Z., Huang J. - Q. 2004. A survey on Anthomedusae (Hydrozoa: Hydroidomedusae) from the Taiwan Strait with description of new species and new combinations. Acta Oceanologica Sinica 23 (3): 549 - 562.

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Fig. 14. Leuckartiara longicalcar, n. spec., living animal (paratype), total height about 15 mm.

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Fig. 15. Leuckartiara longicalcar, n. spec., living animal. (A) Details of manubrium with gonad folds. (B) Lateral view of a perradial tentacle with the characteristic, long, abaxial spur. (C) Adradial tentacles and rudimentary bulbs, note red ocelli.

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Fig. 16. Leuckartiara longicalcar, n. spec., living animal, height 13-18 mm, photographed by Kevin Lee off Los Angeles, California, USA. Note, this photograph is copyright protected and permission to use it here has been obtained by paying a royalty fee to the author and copyright holder Kevin Lee (www.diverkevin.com).

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Fig. 17. Leuckartiara spec., living animal. (A) Whole medusa. (B) Bell margin with tentacle bases. (C) Details of manubrium with gonad folds (immature?).

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Fig. 8. 16S maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of Pandeidae species obtained with PhyML (GTR+G+I model) and based on 595 bp positions of the mitochondrial 16S gene. Node-support values are bootstrap values of 100 pseudoreplicates (shown only if > 70%). For more details see text and Table 1. Samples based on the polyp stage are indicated, all others are medusa samples.

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Fig. 9. COI maximum likelihood phylogenetic tree of Pandeidae species obtained with PhyML (GTR+G+I model) and based on 664 bp positions of the mitochondrial COI gene. Node-support values are bootstrap values of 100 pseudoreplicates (shown only if> 70%). For more details see text and Table 1. Samples based on the polyp stage are indicated, all others are medusa samples.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Hydrozoa

Order

Anthoathecata

Family

Pandeidae

Genus

Leuckartiara