Published October 25, 2019 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Acryptolaria longitheca

Description

Acryptolaria longitheca (Allman, 1877)

Figs. 6a, b, 7a

Cryptolaria longitheca Allman, 1877: 19, pl. 13, figs. 4–5.— Clarke, 1879: 244, pl. 2, figs. 7–10.

Acryptolaria longitheca. — Fraser 1943: 90.

Type locality. Bahamas: Cay Sal Bank, Double-Headed Shot Key, 315 ftm (576 m) (Allman 1877: 19, as Cryptolaria longitheca).

Material examined. Southwest Florida Shelf, middle shelf west of North Naples, 26°16’30”N, 83°42’30”W, 80.5 m, 03 November 1980, three colony fragments, up to 7 cm high, without gonophores, coll. Continental Shelf Associates, ROMIZ B1907.— Southwest Florida Shelf, middle shelf west of North Naples, 26°16.72′N, 83°46.82′W, 83 m, 24 July 1981, otter trawl, one colony, 8.3 cm high, without gonophores, coll. Continental Shelf Associates, ROMIZ B1905.— Southwest Florida Shelf, outer shelf west of North Naples, 26°16.67′N, 84°04.08′W, 137 m, 25 July 1981, triangle dredge, five colony fragments, up to 9.3 cm high, some with coppiniae, coll. Continental Shelf Associates, ROMIZ B1902.

Remarks. Allman’s (1877) original description of Acryptolaria longitheca (as Cryptolaria longitheca) was brief and in some respects inaccurate. In particular, hydrothecae were said to be “…cylindrical throughout, presenting no diminution of their diameter towards the base…” That characterization was followed by Fraser (1943, 1944) in his accounts of the species. However, Clarke (1879: 244) found that hydrothecae in Allman’s type indeed tapered towards the base. His observation was confirmed by Peña Cantero et al. (2007), who examined, illustrated, and redescribed the holotype colony. A combination of hydrothecal characters was used by them to distinguish the species from others of the genus Acryptolaria Norman, 1875: (1) abcauline wall homogeneously curved; (2) diameter of hydrothecal cavity distinctly wider in free part than in adnate part; (3) hydrothecal base gradually tapered rather than abruptly bottlenecked; (4) hydrothecal aperture diameter <300 μm rather than>300 μm; (5) adcauline wall adnate for half rather than 2/3 of its length; (6) free part of adcauline wall nearly straight (Peña Cantero et al. 2007: 273). Material examined here from the Southwest Florida Shelf conformed with all of these characters. The species has been taken to be valid in major recent works on Acryptolaria by Peña Cantero et al. (2007) and Peña Cantero & Vervoort (2010).

In addition to hydrothecal characters, the cnidome was also found by Peña Cantero et al. (2007) to be useful in distinguishing species of Acryptolaria. Large nematocysts in material examined here (Fig. 7a) appeared to be macrobasic mastigophores (19.4–23.0 μm long x 5.9–6.5 μm wide, undischarged, n=10, ROMIZ B1902). These were somewhat more slender than ones described in type material of A. longitheca (21–23 μm long × 6.5–8 μm wide) by Peña Cantero et al. (2007) and Peña Cantero & Vervoort (2010), but the difference was small and considered taxonomically inconsequential.

Gonothecae in material identified as A. longitheca by Clarke (1879) from the western edge of the Southwest Florida Shelf (25°33’N, 84°21’W), and considered correctly identified by Peña Cantero et al. (2007) and Peña Cantero & Vervoort (2010), also correspond in morphology with those examined here (Fig. 6b). Clarke described them as “…polygonal in form, largest at the distal end, tapering to the base, crowded so closely together that the walls of adjoining bodies are in contact throughout their length, and are provided with a small tubular orifice arising from the centre of the distal end…” Gonothecae of specimens identified as A. longitheca by Calder & Vervoort (1998) from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge differ in being much more slender, and that deep water material may be referable to a different species.

Distribution records of this species were listed by Peña Cantero et al. (2007: 289). Most of them were considered questionable, and with justification. Considered valid, in addition to Allman’s (1877) account from the Bahamas, was that of Clarke (1879) from the Southwest Florida Shelf. Material examined here came from the same general locality. Elsewhere, Peña Cantero & Vervoort (2010) reported Acryptolaria longitheca from the western Pacific Ocean (Loyalty Islands and Norfolk Ridge). If only on zoogeographic grounds, those records need confirmation. Said by them to be similar to A. longitheca is A. gemini Peña Cantero & Vervoort, 2010 from Gemini Seamount, Vanuatu.

Reported distribution. Gulf coast of Florida. Southwest Florida Shelf, NW of the Dry Tortugas, 25°33′N, 84°21′W, 101 ftm (185 m) (Clarke 1879: 244, as Cryptolaria longitheca).—?S of Florida Keys, 24°18’N, 80°58’30”W, 324 ftm (593 m) (Fraser 1943: 90).

Elsewhere in western North Atlantic. Bahamas: Cay Sal Bank, Double-Headed Shot Key, 315 ftm (576 m) (Allman 1877: 19, as Cryptolaria longitheca).—? Dominica: 76 ftm (139 m) (Fewkes 1881a: 128, as Cryptolaria longitheca).—? French Lesser Antilles: Martinique, 334 ftm (611 m) (Fewkes 1881a: 128, as Cryptolaria longitheca).—? Barbados: 103 ftm (188 m) (Fewkes 1881a: 128, as Cryptolaria longitheca).— Barbados: 13°11’54”N, 59°38’45”W, 73 ftm (134 m) (Fraser 1943: 90).—? North Atlantic Ocean: abyss E of South Carolina, USA, 32°34’N, 74°21.5’W, 4681 m (Vervoort 1972: 45).—? Bermuda: Bermuda Pedestal, on stalks of hexactinellid sponges, 3550 m + 3011 m (Calder 1996: 1723).— Bahamas: Cay Sal Bank, Double-Headed Shot Key, 315 ftm (576 m) (Calder & Vervoort 1998: 24; re-examination of holotype). ? USA: Louisiana, continental slope, 540–560 m, from vestimentiferan aggregrations on water cold seeps (Bergquist et al. 2003: 205).— Bahamas: Cay Sal Bank, Double-Headed Shot Key, 315 ftm (576 m) (Peña Cantero et al. 2007: 252; re-examination of holotype).

Notes

Published as part of Calder, Dale R., 2019, On a collection of hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the southwest coast of Florida, USA, pp. 1-141 in Zootaxa 4689 (1) on pages 26-27, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4689.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/3519047

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Linked records

Additional details

Biodiversity

Collection code
ROMIZ
Event date
1981-07-24 , 1981-07-25
Family
Lafoeidae
Genus
Acryptolaria
Kingdom
Animalia
Material sample ID
B1902 , B1905
Order
Leptothecata
Phylum
Cnidaria
Scientific name authorship
Allman
Species
longitheca
Taxon rank
species
Type status
holotype
Verbatim event date
1981-07-24 , 1981-07-25
Taxonomic concept label
Acryptolaria longitheca (Allman, 1877) sec. Calder, 2019

References

  • Allman, G. J. (1877) Report on the Hydroida collected during the exploration of the Gulf Stream by L. F. de Pourtales, assistant United States Coast Survey. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College, 5 (2), 1 - 66. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 15852
  • Clarke, S. F. (1879) Report on the Hydroida collected during the exploration of the Gulf Stream and Gulf of Mexico by Alexan- der Agassiz, 1877 - 78. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College, 5, 239 - 252.
  • Fraser, C. M. (1943) Distribution records of some hydroids in the collection of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College, with description of new genera and new species. Proceedings of the New England Zoological Club, 22, 75 - 98.
  • Fraser, C. M. (1944) Hydroids of the Atlantic coast of North America. University of Toronto Press, Toronto, 451 pp.
  • Pena Cantero, A. L., Marques, A. C. & Migotto, A. E. (2007) Revision of the genus Acryptolaria Norman, 1875 (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Lafoeidae). Journal of Natural History, 41, 229 - 291. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222930701228132
  • Norman, A. M. (1875) Submarine-cable fauna. Part II. Crustacea, etc. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 4, 15, 170 - 176. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222937508681053
  • Pena Cantero, A. L. & Vervoort, W. (2010) Species of Acryptolaria Norman, 1875 (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa, Lafoeidae) collected in the western Pacific by various French expeditions, with the description of nineteen new species. Zoosystema, 32, 267 - 332. https: // doi. org / 10.5252 / z 2010 n 2 a 5
  • Calder, D. R. & Vervoort, W. (1998) Some hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge, in the North Atlantic Ocean. Zoologische Verhandelingen, 319, 1 - 65.
  • Fewkes, J. W. (1881 a) Reports on the results of dredging, under the supervision of Alexander Agassiz, in the Caribbean Sea, in 1878, 1879, and along the Atlantic coast of the United States, during the summer of 1880, by the U. S. Coast Survey Steamer " Blake, " Commander J. R. Bartlett, U. S. N., commanding. XI. Report on the Acalephae. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College, 8, 127 - 140.
  • Vervoort, W. (1972) Hydroids from the Theta, Vema and Yelcho cruises of the Lamont-Doherty Geological Observatory. Zoologische Verhandelingen, 120, 1 - 247.
  • Calder, D. R. (1996) Hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) recorded from depths exceeding 3000 m in the abyssal western North Atlantic. Canadian Journal of Zoology, 74, 1721 - 1726. https: // doi. org / 10.1139 / z 96 - 190
  • Bergquist, D. C., Ward, T., Cordes, E. E., McNelis, T., Howlett, S., Kosoff, R., Hourdez, S., Carney, R. & Fisher, C. R. (2003) Community structure of vestimentiferan-generated habitat islands from Gulf of Mexico cold seeps. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology, 289, 197 - 222. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / S 0022 - 0981 (03) 00046 - 7