Abstract

The little-known Anthomedusa Halimedusa typus has been collected from several locations in California, Oregon, and British Columbia on the Pacific coast of the United States. The adult medusa is redescribed based on new observations of living material and is found to have capitate tentacles. Polyps of H. typus were raised several times after spawning field-collected medusae in the laboratory; the cultures on one occasion lived for more than a year. The capitate polyp is solitary and very tiny, emerging from a basal perisarc measuring 200-300 µm in diameter. One cultured polyp produced a medusa, which is described. The taxonomic positions of several other morphologically-similar Anthomedusae in the Capitata are compared and discussed here. Tiaricodon coeruleus and Urashimea globosa are moved from the Polyorchidae to the Halimedusidae, and the similarity of Boeromedusa auricogonia (Boeromedusidae) to all of these medusae and to the genera Polyorchis, Scrippsia and Spirocodon of the family Polyorchidae is considered. The group of species under consideration is basically restricted to the Pacific Ocean, except for T. coeruleus and U. globosa, which have also been collected in the south Atlantic and south Atlantic/Antarctic. It is noted that medusae of the Halimedusidae are typically found quiescent near the surface, whereas those of the Polyorchidae either rest on the bottom or must continue pulsating to stay up in the water column, indicating a basic underlying difference in buoyancy and resultant behavior between the medusae in these two families.

Highlights

  • Further observations in low salinity tributaries to San Francisco Bay of hydromedusae and their polyps in the genera Maeotias, Blackfordia, and Moerisia have revealed a number of errors in the Mills and Sommer (1995) paper, which first described the presence of two of these invasive species in California

  • Polyps previously attributed to Maeotias in San Francisco Bay are known to belong to a Moerisia sp., whose medusa has recently been found in the estuary system

  • Solitary Moerisia polyps have been found in the field amongst the general fouling fauna on floating docks in the Napa River

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Summary

Introduction

Further observations in low salinity tributaries to San Francisco Bay of hydromedusae and their polyps in the genera Maeotias, Blackfordia, and Moerisia have revealed a number of errors in the Mills and Sommer (1995) paper, which first described the presence of two of these invasive species in California. Polyps previously attributed to Maeotias in San Francisco Bay are known to belong to a Moerisia sp., whose medusa has recently been found in the estuary system. Polyps of Blackfordia virginica have been found in abundance in the field covering the valves of nonindigenous barnacles in the Napa River and laboratory-cultured colonies are pictured here along with their newly-released and juvenile medusae.

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