Epiactis prolifera Verrill, 1869

Vassallo-Avalos, Aurora, González-Muñoz, Ricardo, Acuña, Fabián H., Cervantes-Ramírez, Itzel Ittaí & Rivas, Gerardo, 2022, Intertidal sea anemones (Cnidaria: Actiniaria) from the west coast of the Peninsula of Baja California, Mexico, Zootaxa 5165 (2), pp. 151-179 : 168-169

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5165.2.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:6EE2801D-1D10-42FF-9949-D96FDAD46ABC

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6834828

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A987F0-9459-FFC7-13B6-F9EDD8D57597

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Epiactis prolifera Verrill, 1869
status

 

Epiactis prolifera Verrill, 1869 View in CoL

( Figure 6 View FIGURE 6 , Table 6 View TABLE 6 )

Bunodes japonica Verrill, 1869 (1870) View in CoL , p. 62 [28]

Epiactis fertilis Andres, 1883, p. 570 View in CoL , 574–575

Epiactis prolifera Verrill, 1869, p. 492 View in CoL –493 [original description]

Epiactis ritteri Torrey, 1902, p. 393 View in CoL –394

[non] Epiactis prolifera Uchida, 1934, p. 17 View in CoL –31

Material examined. (See Appendix 1).

Short description.

External anatomy: oral disc smooth, flat, reddish to cherry, or olive-green, with whitish radial lines; mouth rounded. Tentacles shorter than oral disc, smooth, thin, tips blunt, reddish to cherry or olive-green, base whitish to gray; tentacles arranged in five cycles (up to 72 tentacles in specimens examined), all of similar length ( Figure 6A–B View FIGURE 6 ). Deep fosse. Column cylindrical, smooth, in preserved specimens 4–10 mm in height, 5–17 mm in diameter, with mesenterial insertions visible as light and dark alternating longitudinal rows. Pedal disc well-developed, 6–21 mm in diameter, adherent, irregular, smooth, wider than diameter of column. Column and pedal disc reddish to cherry or olive-green with white vertical lines along the column. Up to 25 broods of different sizes attached to the middle of the column, forming a kind of ring around it ( Figure 6A–D View FIGURE 6 ). Preserved specimens with beige column, the most proximal part with raised folds, tentacles the same color as the column.

Internal anatomy: mesenteries arranged in four cycles: first and second perfect, others imperfect.Actinopharynx slightly sulcated with two pairs of directive mesenteries, each attached to well-developed siphonoglyph. Oocytes and spermatic cysts in the imperfect mesenteries ( Figure 6E–F View FIGURE 6 ). Retractor muscles restricted to diffuse. Parietobasilar muscles well developed ( Figure 6G View FIGURE 6 ); basilar muscles well developed. Endodermal marginal sphincter muscle circumscribed, palmate ( Figure 6H View FIGURE 6 ). Longitudinal muscles of tentacles ectodermal ( Figure 6I View FIGURE 6 ). Azooxanthellate.

Cnidom: basitrichs, spirocysts, holotrichs, and p -mastigophores A ( Figure 6J–R View FIGURE 6 ). See Table 6 View TABLE 6 for the sizes and distribution of cnidae.

Natural history. Epiactis prolifera inhabits open shores in the intertidal zone attached to rocks, algae or sea grasses, in crevices or hollows. It is also found in the subtidal, some individuals have been extracted from 5 to 27 m ( Hand 1955).

Distribution. Along the North American Pacific coast in Washington, Oregon and California ( Verrill 1869; Carlgren 1949, 1951; Hand 1955; Dunn 1975; Fautin & Chia 1986; Larson & Daly 2015, 2016). This is the first record for Mexico.

Remarks. Currently 19 species of the genus Epiactis are known ( Daly & Fautin 2022b) of which five are distributed in the North Pacific and have external brooding: E. japonica ( Verrill 1869) , E. lisbethae Fautin & Chia, 1986 , E. prolifera , E. ritteri Torrey, 1902 ( Larson & Daly 2016) and E. irregularis Carlgren, 1951 . Epiactis ritteri is distinguished from E. prolifera by the flattened limbus ornamented with square-based protuberances containing holotrichs, and is monochrome in color. Likewise, characteristics of the brooding groove and the protuberances on the column distinguish E. japonica from E. prolifera ( Larson & Daly 2015) .

The sphincter of E. prolifera is restricted and palmate, unlike that of E. irregularis which is almost restricted and elongate as shown by Carlgren (1951). Although the reviewed specimens agree with E. irregularis in the absence of holotrichs in the column, they differ in the presence of basitrichs larger than 21 µm in the column. Moreover, spirocysts and holotrichs are not reported in the tentacles of E. irregularis , unlike E. prolifera . We did not observe basitrichs larger than 38 µm in the filaments, in contrast to the report by Carlgren (1951). The specimen that Carlgren (1951) observed was sterile, so the sex allocation and brood location in E. irregularis cannot be known.

Epiactis lisbethae resembles E. prolifera in the coloration of the column and the sizes and distribution of the cnidae. However, E. prolifera adheres no more than 40 young, generally of different sizes, which reflects a continuous reproduction, unlike E. lisbethae that can adhere several hundred young, generally of the same size, with seasonal reproduction ( Fautin & Chia 1986). In addition, E. prolifera is a gynodioecious hermaphrodite while E. lisbethae is gonochoric ( Dunn 1975; Fautin & Chia 1986). The populations of E. prolifera consist of females and hermaphrodites but not males and not all individuals exhibit hermaphroditism ( Dunn, 1975). The reproductive characteristsics of our specimens are the same as has been reported for E. prolifera and unlike E. lisbethae : we found hermaphroditic specimens and observed spermatogenic and oogenic tissue in the same mesentery, as did Dunn (1975) for E. prolifera . Although Fautin & Chia (1986) indicate that E. prolifera lacks longitudinal column stripes, our specimens have vertical white stripes on its column, which agrees with Hand´s (1955) report.

The cnidom we report agree with those previously reported ( Carlgren 1952; Hand 1955; Fautin & Chia 1986) except for the holotrichs in the column which were not found in our specimens. Hand (1955) also did not report holotrichs in the column. This absence could be related to antagonistic behaviors where these cnidae may or may not appear according to the interactions of the species ( Dunn et al. 1980).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Cnidaria

Class

Anthozoa

Order

Actiniaria

Family

Actiniidae

Genus

Epiactis

Loc

Epiactis prolifera Verrill, 1869

Vassallo-Avalos, Aurora, González-Muñoz, Ricardo, Acuña, Fabián H., Cervantes-Ramírez, Itzel Ittaí & Rivas, Gerardo 2022
2022
Loc

Epiactis fertilis

Andres, A. 1883: 570
1883
Loc

Epiactis prolifera

Verrill, E. A. 1869: 492
1869
GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF