Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species

Paraisanthus fabiani new species External anatomy (Fig. 2). Size in vivo , measured in aquaria: oral disc 7–12 mm diameter, column to 10 mm diameter, pedal disc to 19 mm diameter, 13–20 mm long, tentacles about half as long as diameter of oral disc. Size preserved: oral disc to 8 mm diameter, pedal...

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Main Authors: Häussermann, Verena, Försterra, Günter
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5688855
https://zenodo.org/record/5688855
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5688855
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Anthozoa
Actiniaria
Isanthidae
Paraisanthus
Paraisanthus fabiani
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Anthozoa
Actiniaria
Isanthidae
Paraisanthus
Paraisanthus fabiani
Häussermann, Verena
Försterra, Günter
Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Cnidaria
Anthozoa
Actiniaria
Isanthidae
Paraisanthus
Paraisanthus fabiani
description Paraisanthus fabiani new species External anatomy (Fig. 2). Size in vivo , measured in aquaria: oral disc 7–12 mm diameter, column to 10 mm diameter, pedal disc to 19 mm diameter, 13–20 mm long, tentacles about half as long as diameter of oral disc. Size preserved: oral disc to 8 mm diameter, pedal disc to 19 mm diameter, column to 16 mm long, tentacles to 5 mm long. Colour (Figs. 3 A–G). Oral disc red, orange, yellowish, pale rose, pink, light brown or ochre; uniformly coloured or with (often 12) reddish-brown radial lines visible on endocoels, or with 12 -lobed, petal-like white and yellow pattern (Fig. 2 B). Mesenterial insertions visible through oral disc. Actinopharynx yellow to light brown. Tentacles slightly transparent, rose to red or pink, yellowish, light brown or ochre; uniformly coloured (Figs. 2 D–G) or with 3–6 brown transverse bands at inner and outer or only inner side (Figs. 2 A–C). Column rose-coloured, reddish, yellowish, orange to ochre, or light brown; uniformly coloured or distalmost 1 / 4 – 1 / 5 more intensely coloured (often brown; Fig. 2 D) with a short transition to paler proximal portion of column; colour generally continuously fading towards pedal disc. Pedal disc coloured as column, not transparent. Preserved specimens whitish to brown. Oral disc and tentacles. Between 66 and 110 conical tentacles, hexamerously arranged in 5–6 cycles, last cycle generally not complete, length about half diameter of oral disc, inner longer than outer, situated on outer third to half of oral disc, innermost 12 (two cycles) in many animals slightly more central (Fig. 2 A), more intensely coloured and directed upward. Oral disc circular, mesenterial insertions in many specimens visible as darker lines (Figs. 2 A,C,D,E). Mouth opening central, slightly oval, slightly elevated in many specimens. Column. In situ higher than broad, after sampling broader than high, proximally broader than distally; smooth, often with loose ring of mucus and dirt in proximal part (Figs. 2 C,D,G). Small fosse. Column can completely cover tentacles when retracted. Pedal disc. More or less circular, generally wider than column and oral disc, limbus slightly lobed. Internal anatomy. In most parts of column, 24 mesenteries hexamerously arranged in four cycles, first cycle (six pairs) including directives fertile macrocnemes with strong circumscript retractors, second and third cycle (six plus 12 pairs) sterile microcnemes without retractors, fourth cycle incomplete, pairs of extremely small microcnemes only just below margin, unequal proximal extension of mesenteries of a pair. Mesenteries of second cycle wider than those of third cycle. More tentacles than mesenteries in mid-column and at base. Actinopharynx deeply furrowed, with two distinct siphonoglyphs, about half length of column; two pairs of FIGURE 3. Histological sections of Paraisanthus fabiani : A, macrocneme with retractor and parietobasilar muscle; B, transverse section of the upper column; C, transverse section of the lower column; D, longitudinal section of the upper column with sphincter; E, cross section through tentacle; F, longitudinal section of the pedal disc with basilar muscles. 1 st to 3 rd cycle of mesenteries I, II, III, basilar muscles bm, directives d, ectoderm ec, endoderm en, ectodermal longitudinal muscles of tentacle et, mesogloea m, macrocnemes ma, filaments mf, microcnemes mi, parietobasilar muscles pb, actinopharynx ph, retractor muscles r, sperms s, siphonoglyph si, sphincter sp. TABLE 2. Size and distribution of cnidae of Paraisanthus fabiani n. sp. (ZSM 20070247 / 1, letters refer to Fig. 4), in each tissue in order of abundance: s: sporadic, f: few, c: common and v: very common. “m l“ and “m w” are the means, “d l” and “d w” are the standard deviations (all in µm), “t” is the apparent total number of turns of spine-rows on the shaft, “#” is the number of capsules measured, “p” is the proportion of specimens having this cnida type. Exceptional sizes in parentheses. Spirocysts (A,M), basitrichs (B,C,D,F,H,J,L,O), microbasic p-mastigophores (E,N,P), microbasic pmastigophores B 1 (G,I,K). directives. Oral and marginal stomata; marginal stomata circular, in the centre of stronger mesenteries (stomata not always visible in smaller specimens). Sexes separate, no signs of asexual reproduction. Five of the sectioned specimens with reproductive tissue, collected in February and March, four male (ZSM 20070246, ZSM 20070247 / 1, ZSM 20070249, USNM 1101612), one female (ZSM 20051690). No zooxanthellae. Sphincter mesogloeal, strong, nearly entire width of mesogloea (Fig. 3 D), restricted to uppermost part (~ 1 / 8 – 1 / 10) of column. Macrocneme retractors strong, strongly restricted to circumscribed (Figs. 3 A–C). Parietobasilar muscles distinct on perfect mesenteries (Figs. 3 A–C); basilar muscles distinct (Fig. 3 F). Longitudinal muscles of tentacles (Fig. 3 E) and radial muscles of oral disc ectodermal. Endodermal circular muscles of column well marked, weaker at sphincter level (Fig. 3 D). Cnidom. Spirocysts, basitrichs, microbasic p-mastigophores B (Fig. 4). Cnidae of eight specimens were examined. Etymology. The species is dedicated to our son Fabian who was born on May 16 th 2007 some days after the submission of this paper. Habitat, distribution, and zoogeography. Shallow subtidal to at least 30 m in less protected channels and at exposed islands of Chilean fjord region between Faro Corona, Chiloé Island (41 ° 47 ’02.0’’S; 73 ° 52 ’ 58.8 ’’W) and Archipelago Madre de Dios (50 ° 20 ’ 23.1 "S; 75 ° 22 ’ 39.2 "W) (Fig. 1). Not present along exposed coast north of fjord region between Faro Corona, North Chiloé Island, and Arica, North Chile (41 ° 47 ’S to about 15 °S), or in southern third of fjord region between Archipelago Madre de Dios and Straits of Magellan (50 ° 20 ’S to about 53 °S) (Fig. 1); neither present in protected fjords and channels with superficial fresh water layer. Thus, it is present in both the Northern and the Central Patagonian Zone (see Pickard 1971; Häussermann 2006), which are separated by Peninsula Taitao and Golfo de Penas (Fig. 1), hypothesized by Lancellotti and Vasquez (2000) and Häussermann and Försterra (2005) to be zoogeographic barriers, but not in the Southern Patagonian Zone south of the Straits of Magellan. Natural history and field notes. Not abundant at any site, but if present, generally several clustered specimens found (Fig. 5). Pedal disc and column generally hidden in holes or crevices of rocky substrate, between stones or between polychaete tubes into which entire animal retracts when disturbed (Fig. 5). Tentacles of neighbouring specimens regularly in contact with each other. Specimens observed in same habitat with the sea anemones Halcurias pilatus McMurrich, 1893, Phellia exlex McMurrich, 1904, Sagartiidae sp. (Fig. 5 C), and a corallimorpharian ( Corynactis sp.); in Central Patagonian Zone also with the sea anemone Metridium senile lobatum Carlgren, 1899 (Riemann-Zürneck 1975). Difficult to collect without injury due to cryptic microhabitats; ideally collected with hammer and chisel together with substrate. Specimens relatively sensitive; reattach only slowly to hard substrate in aquarium even if not injured. In the aquarium, specimens soon hide column between or under stones or in holes in substrate (such as dead barnacles). Addition of MgCl 2 to aquarium water (for relaxation) provoked spawning in one specimen collected in February 1998 at Quellón. : Published as part of Häussermann, Verena & Försterra, Günter, 2008, A new species of sea anemone from the Chilean fjord region, Paraisanthus fabiani (Actiniaria: Isanthidae), with a discussion of the family Isanthidae Carlgren, 1938, pp. 27-42 in Zootaxa 1897 on pages 32-39, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.184465 : {"references": ["Pickard, G. L. (1971) Some physical oceanographic features of inlets of Chile. Journal Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 28, 1077 - 1106.", "Haussermann, V. (2006) Biodiversity of Chilean sea anemones (Cnidaria: Anthozoa): distribution patterns and zoogeographic implications; including new records for the fjord region. Investigaciones Marinas, 34, 23 - 35.", "Lancellotti, D. A. & Vasquez, J. A. (2000) Zoogeography of benthic macroinvertebrates of the Chilean coast: Contribution for marine conservation. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural, 73, 99 - 129.", "Haussermann, V. & Forsterra, G. (2005) Distribution patterns of Chilean shallow-water sea anemones (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Actiniaria, Corallimorpharia); with a discussion of the taxonomic and zoogeographic relationships between the actinofauna of the South East Pacific, the South West Atlantic and Antarctica. In: Arntz, W. E., Lovrich, G. A. & Thatje, S. (Eds) The Magellan-Antarctic connection: Links and Frontiers at High Southern Latitudes. Scientia Marina, 69 (Suppl. 2), pp. 91 - 102.", "McMurrich, J. P. (1893) Scientific results of explorations by the U. S. Fish Commission Steamer Albatross. No. XXIII. - Report on the Actiniae collected by the United States Fish Commission Steamer Albatross during the winter of 1887 - 1888. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 16, 119 - 216.", "McMurrich, J. P. (1904) The Actiniae of the Plate Collection. Zoologische Jahrbucher Jena, 6 Suppl., 215 - 306.", "Carlgren, O. (1899 (for 1898 )) Zoantharien. Hamburger Magalhaensische Sammelreise, 4, 1 - 48.", "Riemann-Zurneck, K. (1975) Actiniaria des Sudwestatlantik. II. Sagartiidae un Metridiidae. Helgolander Wissenschaftliche Meeresuntersuchungen, 27, 70 - 95."]}
format Text
author Häussermann, Verena
Försterra, Günter
author_facet Häussermann, Verena
Försterra, Günter
author_sort Häussermann, Verena
title Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species
title_short Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species
title_full Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species
title_fullStr Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species
title_full_unstemmed Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species
title_sort paraisanthus fabiani häussermann & försterra, 2008, new species
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2008
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5688855
https://zenodo.org/record/5688855
long_lat ENVELOPE(19.182,19.182,69.959,69.959)
ENVELOPE(166.550,166.550,-78.233,-78.233)
ENVELOPE(-63.983,-63.983,-65.517,-65.517)
ENVELOPE(15.249,15.249,68.755,68.755)
ENVELOPE(-133.353,-133.353,62.231,62.231)
geographic Antarctic
Canada
Pacific
Fosse
Ochre
Chiloé
Pilatus
Faro
geographic_facet Antarctic
Canada
Pacific
Fosse
Ochre
Chiloé
Pilatus
Faro
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
op_relation http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFBBED39FFBDFFFC2935FFD87671FF85
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184465
http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFBBED39FFBDFFFC2935FFD87671FF85
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184467
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184468
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184466
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184469
https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5688854
https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit
op_rights Open Access
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5688855
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184465
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184467
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184468
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184466
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184469
https://doi.or
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.5688855 2023-05-15T14:01:02+02:00 Paraisanthus fabiani Häussermann & Försterra, 2008, new species Häussermann, Verena Försterra, Günter 2008 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5688855 https://zenodo.org/record/5688855 unknown Zenodo http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFBBED39FFBDFFFC2935FFD87671FF85 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184465 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFBBED39FFBDFFFC2935FFD87671FF85 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184467 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184468 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184466 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184469 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5688854 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Cnidaria Anthozoa Actiniaria Isanthidae Paraisanthus Paraisanthus fabiani Taxonomic treatment article-journal Text ScholarlyArticle 2008 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5688855 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184465 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184467 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184468 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184466 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.184469 https://doi.or 2022-02-08T13:42:09Z Paraisanthus fabiani new species External anatomy (Fig. 2). Size in vivo , measured in aquaria: oral disc 7–12 mm diameter, column to 10 mm diameter, pedal disc to 19 mm diameter, 13–20 mm long, tentacles about half as long as diameter of oral disc. Size preserved: oral disc to 8 mm diameter, pedal disc to 19 mm diameter, column to 16 mm long, tentacles to 5 mm long. Colour (Figs. 3 A–G). Oral disc red, orange, yellowish, pale rose, pink, light brown or ochre; uniformly coloured or with (often 12) reddish-brown radial lines visible on endocoels, or with 12 -lobed, petal-like white and yellow pattern (Fig. 2 B). Mesenterial insertions visible through oral disc. Actinopharynx yellow to light brown. Tentacles slightly transparent, rose to red or pink, yellowish, light brown or ochre; uniformly coloured (Figs. 2 D–G) or with 3–6 brown transverse bands at inner and outer or only inner side (Figs. 2 A–C). Column rose-coloured, reddish, yellowish, orange to ochre, or light brown; uniformly coloured or distalmost 1 / 4 – 1 / 5 more intensely coloured (often brown; Fig. 2 D) with a short transition to paler proximal portion of column; colour generally continuously fading towards pedal disc. Pedal disc coloured as column, not transparent. Preserved specimens whitish to brown. Oral disc and tentacles. Between 66 and 110 conical tentacles, hexamerously arranged in 5–6 cycles, last cycle generally not complete, length about half diameter of oral disc, inner longer than outer, situated on outer third to half of oral disc, innermost 12 (two cycles) in many animals slightly more central (Fig. 2 A), more intensely coloured and directed upward. Oral disc circular, mesenterial insertions in many specimens visible as darker lines (Figs. 2 A,C,D,E). Mouth opening central, slightly oval, slightly elevated in many specimens. Column. In situ higher than broad, after sampling broader than high, proximally broader than distally; smooth, often with loose ring of mucus and dirt in proximal part (Figs. 2 C,D,G). Small fosse. Column can completely cover tentacles when retracted. Pedal disc. More or less circular, generally wider than column and oral disc, limbus slightly lobed. Internal anatomy. In most parts of column, 24 mesenteries hexamerously arranged in four cycles, first cycle (six pairs) including directives fertile macrocnemes with strong circumscript retractors, second and third cycle (six plus 12 pairs) sterile microcnemes without retractors, fourth cycle incomplete, pairs of extremely small microcnemes only just below margin, unequal proximal extension of mesenteries of a pair. Mesenteries of second cycle wider than those of third cycle. More tentacles than mesenteries in mid-column and at base. Actinopharynx deeply furrowed, with two distinct siphonoglyphs, about half length of column; two pairs of FIGURE 3. Histological sections of Paraisanthus fabiani : A, macrocneme with retractor and parietobasilar muscle; B, transverse section of the upper column; C, transverse section of the lower column; D, longitudinal section of the upper column with sphincter; E, cross section through tentacle; F, longitudinal section of the pedal disc with basilar muscles. 1 st to 3 rd cycle of mesenteries I, II, III, basilar muscles bm, directives d, ectoderm ec, endoderm en, ectodermal longitudinal muscles of tentacle et, mesogloea m, macrocnemes ma, filaments mf, microcnemes mi, parietobasilar muscles pb, actinopharynx ph, retractor muscles r, sperms s, siphonoglyph si, sphincter sp. TABLE 2. Size and distribution of cnidae of Paraisanthus fabiani n. sp. (ZSM 20070247 / 1, letters refer to Fig. 4), in each tissue in order of abundance: s: sporadic, f: few, c: common and v: very common. “m l“ and “m w” are the means, “d l” and “d w” are the standard deviations (all in µm), “t” is the apparent total number of turns of spine-rows on the shaft, “#” is the number of capsules measured, “p” is the proportion of specimens having this cnida type. Exceptional sizes in parentheses. Spirocysts (A,M), basitrichs (B,C,D,F,H,J,L,O), microbasic p-mastigophores (E,N,P), microbasic pmastigophores B 1 (G,I,K). directives. Oral and marginal stomata; marginal stomata circular, in the centre of stronger mesenteries (stomata not always visible in smaller specimens). Sexes separate, no signs of asexual reproduction. Five of the sectioned specimens with reproductive tissue, collected in February and March, four male (ZSM 20070246, ZSM 20070247 / 1, ZSM 20070249, USNM 1101612), one female (ZSM 20051690). No zooxanthellae. Sphincter mesogloeal, strong, nearly entire width of mesogloea (Fig. 3 D), restricted to uppermost part (~ 1 / 8 – 1 / 10) of column. Macrocneme retractors strong, strongly restricted to circumscribed (Figs. 3 A–C). Parietobasilar muscles distinct on perfect mesenteries (Figs. 3 A–C); basilar muscles distinct (Fig. 3 F). Longitudinal muscles of tentacles (Fig. 3 E) and radial muscles of oral disc ectodermal. Endodermal circular muscles of column well marked, weaker at sphincter level (Fig. 3 D). Cnidom. Spirocysts, basitrichs, microbasic p-mastigophores B (Fig. 4). Cnidae of eight specimens were examined. Etymology. The species is dedicated to our son Fabian who was born on May 16 th 2007 some days after the submission of this paper. Habitat, distribution, and zoogeography. Shallow subtidal to at least 30 m in less protected channels and at exposed islands of Chilean fjord region between Faro Corona, Chiloé Island (41 ° 47 ’02.0’’S; 73 ° 52 ’ 58.8 ’’W) and Archipelago Madre de Dios (50 ° 20 ’ 23.1 "S; 75 ° 22 ’ 39.2 "W) (Fig. 1). Not present along exposed coast north of fjord region between Faro Corona, North Chiloé Island, and Arica, North Chile (41 ° 47 ’S to about 15 °S), or in southern third of fjord region between Archipelago Madre de Dios and Straits of Magellan (50 ° 20 ’S to about 53 °S) (Fig. 1); neither present in protected fjords and channels with superficial fresh water layer. Thus, it is present in both the Northern and the Central Patagonian Zone (see Pickard 1971; Häussermann 2006), which are separated by Peninsula Taitao and Golfo de Penas (Fig. 1), hypothesized by Lancellotti and Vasquez (2000) and Häussermann and Försterra (2005) to be zoogeographic barriers, but not in the Southern Patagonian Zone south of the Straits of Magellan. Natural history and field notes. Not abundant at any site, but if present, generally several clustered specimens found (Fig. 5). Pedal disc and column generally hidden in holes or crevices of rocky substrate, between stones or between polychaete tubes into which entire animal retracts when disturbed (Fig. 5). Tentacles of neighbouring specimens regularly in contact with each other. Specimens observed in same habitat with the sea anemones Halcurias pilatus McMurrich, 1893, Phellia exlex McMurrich, 1904, Sagartiidae sp. (Fig. 5 C), and a corallimorpharian ( Corynactis sp.); in Central Patagonian Zone also with the sea anemone Metridium senile lobatum Carlgren, 1899 (Riemann-Zürneck 1975). Difficult to collect without injury due to cryptic microhabitats; ideally collected with hammer and chisel together with substrate. Specimens relatively sensitive; reattach only slowly to hard substrate in aquarium even if not injured. In the aquarium, specimens soon hide column between or under stones or in holes in substrate (such as dead barnacles). Addition of MgCl 2 to aquarium water (for relaxation) provoked spawning in one specimen collected in February 1998 at Quellón. : Published as part of Häussermann, Verena & Försterra, Günter, 2008, A new species of sea anemone from the Chilean fjord region, Paraisanthus fabiani (Actiniaria: Isanthidae), with a discussion of the family Isanthidae Carlgren, 1938, pp. 27-42 in Zootaxa 1897 on pages 32-39, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.184465 : {"references": ["Pickard, G. L. (1971) Some physical oceanographic features of inlets of Chile. Journal Fisheries Research Board of Canada, 28, 1077 - 1106.", "Haussermann, V. (2006) Biodiversity of Chilean sea anemones (Cnidaria: Anthozoa): distribution patterns and zoogeographic implications; including new records for the fjord region. Investigaciones Marinas, 34, 23 - 35.", "Lancellotti, D. A. & Vasquez, J. A. (2000) Zoogeography of benthic macroinvertebrates of the Chilean coast: Contribution for marine conservation. Revista Chilena de Historia Natural, 73, 99 - 129.", "Haussermann, V. & Forsterra, G. (2005) Distribution patterns of Chilean shallow-water sea anemones (Cnidaria: Anthozoa: Actiniaria, Corallimorpharia); with a discussion of the taxonomic and zoogeographic relationships between the actinofauna of the South East Pacific, the South West Atlantic and Antarctica. In: Arntz, W. E., Lovrich, G. A. & Thatje, S. (Eds) The Magellan-Antarctic connection: Links and Frontiers at High Southern Latitudes. Scientia Marina, 69 (Suppl. 2), pp. 91 - 102.", "McMurrich, J. P. (1893) Scientific results of explorations by the U. S. Fish Commission Steamer Albatross. No. XXIII. - Report on the Actiniae collected by the United States Fish Commission Steamer Albatross during the winter of 1887 - 1888. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 16, 119 - 216.", "McMurrich, J. P. (1904) The Actiniae of the Plate Collection. Zoologische Jahrbucher Jena, 6 Suppl., 215 - 306.", "Carlgren, O. (1899 (for 1898 )) Zoantharien. Hamburger Magalhaensische Sammelreise, 4, 1 - 48.", "Riemann-Zurneck, K. (1975) Actiniaria des Sudwestatlantik. II. Sagartiidae un Metridiidae. Helgolander Wissenschaftliche Meeresuntersuchungen, 27, 70 - 95."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Canada Pacific Fosse ENVELOPE(19.182,19.182,69.959,69.959) Ochre ENVELOPE(166.550,166.550,-78.233,-78.233) Chiloé ENVELOPE(-63.983,-63.983,-65.517,-65.517) Pilatus ENVELOPE(15.249,15.249,68.755,68.755) Faro ENVELOPE(-133.353,-133.353,62.231,62.231)