Amphisbetia minima

Amphisbetia minima (Thompson, 1879) Fig. 4B; Table 7 Sertularia minima Thompson, 1879: 104–105, pl. 17 fig. 3. Amphisbetia minima – Millard 1975: 250, fig. 82h–k. — Galea & Schories 2012: 36, fig. 3n–o. Material examined SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN • 2 colonies, growing on algae (1 with gonothecae); Ve...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Gil, Marta, Ramil, Fran
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5088936
https://zenodo.org/record/5088936
Description
Summary:Amphisbetia minima (Thompson, 1879) Fig. 4B; Table 7 Sertularia minima Thompson, 1879: 104–105, pl. 17 fig. 3. Amphisbetia minima – Millard 1975: 250, fig. 82h–k. — Galea & Schories 2012: 36, fig. 3n–o. Material examined SOUTH ATLANTIC OCEAN • 2 colonies, growing on algae (1 with gonothecae); Vema Seamount, stn BT5; 31°37′16″–31°36′58″ S, 8°22′37″–8°23′06″ E; 71–94 m depth; 31 Jan. 2015; SEAFO-2015 leg.; SEAFO-2015-40617, SEAFO-2015-40768, LZM-UV slide R. 584. Remarks The presence of “pores” or “holes” surrounded by a low perisarcal collar below various hydrothecae and usually located at the proximal internodes of the colonies was described by Ralph (1961), Millard (1975) and Vervoort & Watson (2003), but we have not observed any “pores” in our colonies. Nevertheless, these pores seem to be a variable feature in this species, as Vervoort & Watson (2003), after reviewing a large amount of material from New Zealand, stated that in some cases there is a pair of holes in the basalmost internode, but other colonies have a single pore or none at all. This structure has been interpreted as nematothecae (Ralph 1961), comparable to the mamelon of Plumularidae (Millard 1975), or glandular pores (Vervoort & Watson 2003), but their true significance remains unknown. Distribution Amphisbetia minima is considered as a circumglobal species, without records from Arctic and Antarctic waters (Millard 1975; Vervoort & Watson 2003). In the South Atlantic, it was reported from Vema Seamount (Millard 1966), the west coast of South Africa (Millard 1975) and the Tristan da Cunha group of islands (Galea 2010, 2015). Its bathymetric distribution extends from the littoral zone to 664 m depth (Vervoort & Watson 2003). : Published as part of Gil, Marta & Ramil, Fran, 2021, Hydroids (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa) from the Vema and Valdivia seamounts (SE Atlantic), pp. 49-96 in European Journal of Taxonomy 758 on pages 67-68, DOI: 10.5852/ejt.2021.758.1425, http://zenodo.org/record/5088125 : {"references": ["Thompson d'Arcy W. 1879. On some new and rare hydroid zoophytes (Sertulariidae and Thuiariidae) from Australia and New Zealand. The Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 5 3 (14): 97 - 114. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222937908682487", "Galea H. R. & Schories D. 2012. Some hydrozoans (Cnidaria) from Central Chile and the Strait of Magellan. Zootaxa 3296 (1): 19 - 67. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 3296.1.2", "Ralph P. M. 1961. New Zealand thecate hydroids, pt. III. Family Sertulariidae. Transactions and Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute 88 (4): 749 - 838.", "Vervoort W. & Watson J. E. 2003. The marine fauna of New Zealand. Leptothecata (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) (thecate hydroids). NIWA Biodiversity Memoir 119: 1 - 540.", "Millard N. A. H. 1966. Hydroids of the Vema Seamount. Annals of the South African Museum 48: 489 - 496.", "Galea H. R. 2010. Additional shallow-water thecate hydroids (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from Guadeloupe and Les Saintes, French Lesser Antilles. Zootaxa 2570 (1): 1 - 40. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 2570.1.1"]}