Gastroblasta

Galea, Horia R., 2013, New additions to the shallow-water hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) of the French Lesser Antilles: Martinique, Zootaxa 3686 (1), pp. 1-50 : 11

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3686.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:17A93C58-F09C-484A-A26A-F4F27BC91A6C

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5263593

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/D6410C37-BF41-FFFF-FF36-FC60FC7EF994

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Gastroblasta
status

 

? Gastroblasta View in CoL sp.

( Fig. 3 View FIGURE 3. A, B E)

Material examined. Stn. 7, 23.i.2012, 6 m, M019: four fragments on Amphimedon compressa (Porifera) bearing numerous hydrothecae, but no gonothecae (MHNG-INVE-82920).

Description. Hydrothecal pedicels arising irregularly from within the inhalant pores of the sponge host; hydrorhiza deeply embedded in host's tissues. Pedicels annulated basally and distally, sometimes in between, protruding at 365–1700 µm above surface of sponge, diameter 80–105 µm; each carrying a hydrotheca distally. Hydrotheca campanulate with slightly diverging walls from base to rim, 505–620 µm high, 310–380 µm wide at aperture; subhydrothecal chamber rather tall, 90–120 µm high; diaphragm well marked, a ring of desmocytes above; margin with 9–10 wide, triangular, moderately high cusps with rounded tips. Hydranths with ca. 20 tentacles. Gonothecae absent.

Remarks. Clytia -like polyps of the genus Gastroblasta Keller, 1883 , living in symbiotic associations with sponges, are only known for G. r a f f a e l e i Lang, 1886 ( Gravili et al. 2007). The two remaining congeners, G. t i m i d a Keller, 1883 from the Red Sea, and G. o v a l i s ( Mayer, 1900) from Florida, are only known from their medusa stage. The present hydroid may represent the polyp of G. o v a l i s, though rearing experiments or genetic data are necessary to test this assertion.

Geographical distribution. The sole known record of this hydroid is from Martinique, while the medusa of G. ovalis occur from Florida ( Mayer 1900) to Brazil ( Vannucci 1949).

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF