Zootaxa2011,Issue(2980) :14.

Cryptic species, life cycles, and the phylogeny of Clytia (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Campanulariidae)

ALBERTO LINDNER ANNETTE F. GOVIND ARAJAN ALVARO E. MIGOTTO
Zootaxa2011,Issue(2980) :14.

Cryptic species, life cycles, and the phylogeny of Clytia (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa: Campanulariidae)

ALBERTO LINDNER 1ANNETTE F. GOVIND ARAJAN 2ALVARO E. MIGOTTO3
扫码查看

作者信息

  • 1. Departamento de Ecologia e Zoologia, Universidade Federal de Santa Catarina, Florianopolis, SC 88040-970, Brazil
  • 2. Earth and Environmental Sciences Department, Northeastern University, Boston, MA, 02115, U.S.A.
  • 3. Centro de Biologia Marinha, Universidadede Sao Paulo, 11600-970, Sao Sebastiao, SP, Brazil, and Instituto de Biociencias, Universidade de Sao Paulo
  • 折叠

Abstract

Medusae and polyps of Clytia are abundantly found in coastal marine environments and one species in the genus-Clytia hemisphaerica (Linnaeus, 1767)-has become an important experimental model. Yet, only 10 species in the genus have had their life cycleinvestigated. Most species of Clytia are also poorly described, and detailed life cycle and morphological studies are needed for accurate species-level identifications. Here, we investigated the life cycle of Clytia elsaeoswal-dae Stechow, 1914, a species described for the tropical western Atlantic and subsequently considered conspecific to the nearly-cosmopolitan species Clytia gracilis (Sars, 1850) and Clytia hemisphaerica, originally described for the temperate North Atlantic. Based on observationsof mature medusae and multiple colonies from southeastern Brazil and the U. S. Virgin Islands (type locality), our results show that C. elsaeoswaldae is morphologically distinct from C. gracilis and C. hemisphaerica. The morphological results are corroborated by a multigene phylogenetic analysis of the genus Clytia, which shows that C. gracilis-like species form a polyphyletic group of several species. These results suggest that the nearly-cosmopolitan distribution attributed to some species of Clytia may be due to the non-recognition of morphologically similar species with more restricted ranges.

Key words

evolution/systematics/medusa/hydroid/nematocyst/Leptothecata/Phialidium/Brazil/Georges Bank

引用本文复制引用

出版年

2011
Zootaxa

Zootaxa

SCI
ISSN:1175-5326
段落导航相关论文