Published December 31, 2012 | Version v1
Taxonomic treatment Open

Bunodosoma granuliferum Le Sueur 1817

Description

Bunodosoma granuliferum (Le Sueur, 1817)

(Figure 4, Table 2)

Actinia granulifera Le Sueur, 1817: 173.

Urticina Lessoni [sic] Duchassaing, 1850: 9.

Oulactis granulifera Milne-Edwards, 1857: 293.

Urticina granulifera Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1860: 42.

Cereus Lessoni [sic] Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1860: 42, pl. VI, fig. 13, 14.

Anthopleura granulifera Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864: 32, Pl. III, fig. 8.

Anthopleura Granulifera [sic] Duchassaing, 1870: 20.

Aulactinia granulifera Andres, 1883: 230.

Bunodes taeniathus McMurrich, 1889a: 23 –27.

Bunodes taeniatus Carlgren, 1895: 285.

Bunodes granulifera Duerden, 1897: 454.

Bunodosoma granulifera Verrill, 1899a: 44 –45.

Bunodosoma granuliferum Pax, 1910: 162, 164, 165, 184–189.

Phymactis granulifera Stephenson, 1922: 285.

Material examined.— Puerto Morelos (20°55’39.13” N, 86°49’58.93” W; 7 specimens); Isla Contoy (21°28’16.98” N, 86°47’27.87” W; 2 specimens).

Diagnosis.—Fully expanded tentacles and oral disc to 100 mm in diameter. Oral disc 10–70 mm in diameter, smooth, flat, olive-green or reddish-brown (Figure 4 B). Tentacles 48–96, hexamerously arranged in four or five cycles, simple, conical, moderately long, 10–30 mm in length, smooth, tapering distally, inner ones longer than outer ones, contractile, olive-green to green-greyish, often with white spots and flashes of pink or purple (Figure 4 B–D). Deep fossa (Figure 4 F). Margin with acrorhagi (Figure 4 D). Column cylindrical, 6–55 mm in height and 6–38 mm in diameter, densely covered with rounded non-adhesive vesicles arranged in 24 alternating dark and light bands (Figure 4 A, D); dark bands with about five rows of vesicles, light ones with about three. Pedal disc well developed, 8–42 mm in diameter, olive-green to orange (Figure 4 C). Mesenteries hexamerously arranged in four cycles (48 pairs in specimens examined): first, second and some mesenteries of third cycle perfect, others imperfect. No gametogenic tissue observed in specimens examined. Two pairs of directives each attached to a well developed siphonoglyph (Figure 4 E). Retractor muscles more or less restricted and strong; parietobasilar muscles well developed with free mesogleal pennon (Figure 4 E). Basilar muscles well developed. Marginal sphincter muscle endodermal, circumscribed and strong (Figure 4 F). Zooxanthellae present. Cnidom: basitrichs, microbasic p- mastigophores, holotrichs and spirocysts (Figure 4 G–Q; see Table 2).

Natural history.— Bunodosoma granuliferum lives in shallow waters on sandy and rocky areas, and seagrass fields, often between 0.5–2 m depth, but can be found down to 6 m in the lagoon and back-reef zones. One specimen was collected adhered to a leaf of Thalassia testudinum, as epiphytic species do. It is reported to be associated with the crustaceans Periclimenes rathbunae Schmitt, 1924, Thor amboinensis (De Man, 1888), and some reef fishes (Manjarrés 1977). Toxicological studies considered this species as a potential source of biological active compounds (Garateix et al. 2003; Nuñez et al. 2006).

Distribution.—Although this is the first record of Bunodosoma granuliferum for the Mexican Caribbean (Puerto Morelos and Isla Contoy reefs), it is found along the entire Caribbean Sea, from Bermuda to Barbados (see Table 1).

Remarks.—Four valid species of Bunodosoma are reported in the Caribbean Sea: B. granuliferum, B. cavernatum (Bosc, 1802), B. kuekenthali Pax, 1910, and B. sphaerulatum Duerden, 1902b; one, B. cangicum Belém & Preslercravo, 1973 in the northern coast of Brazil (Fautin 2011, Table 1). Bunodosoma granuliferum is distinguished mainly by the chromatic pattern of alternating pale and dark longitudinal bands in the column (Duerden 1902b; Pax 1910; Corrêa 1964; Cairns et al. 1986). The distinction between B. granuliferum and B. cavernatum has been widely discussed (see Carlgren 1952; Carlgren & Hedgpeth 1952; Corrêa 1964). Using allozymes, McCommas & Lester (1980) found that the species are genetically different and considered them as separate valid species. Bunodosoma biscayensis (Fischer, 1874) also has a chromatic pattern of alternating dark and light longitudinal bands in the column; however, it differs from B. granuliferum in the cnidae and geographic distribution (found in the northeast Atlantic Ocean) (den Hartog 1987). Although we did not observe fertile specimens of B. granuliferum, it has been described to have all mesenteries (except the directives) fertile (McMurrich 1889a, Duerden 1902b).

Notes

Published as part of Gonzalez-Muñoz, Ricardo, Simões, Nuno, Sanchez-Rodriguez, Judith, Rodriguez, Estefania & Segura-Puertas, Lourdes, 2012, First Inventory of Sea Anemones (Cnidaria: Actiniaria) of the Mexican Caribbean, pp. 1-38 in Zootaxa 3556 on pages 16-18, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.203987

Files

Files (5.4 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:b34cd3565a2f7a4abb6a51d0f8b921f1
5.4 kB Download

System files (54.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:45b6f79eaf84626e99e25465f650ff40
54.9 kB Download

Linked records

Additional details

References

  • Le Sueur, C. A. (1817) Observations on several species of the genus Actinia; illustrated by figures. Journal of the Academic of Sciences of Philadelphia, 1, 149 - 154, 169 - 189.
  • Duchassaing, P. (1850) Animaux Radiaires des Antilles. Plon Freres, Paris, 33 pp.
  • Milne-Edwards, H. (1857) Historie Naturelle des Coralliaries ou Polypes Proprement Dits, vol. 1. Librairie Encyclopedique de Roret, Paris, 326 pp.
  • Duchassaing, P. & Michelotti, G. (1860) Memoire sur les Coralliaires des Antilles. Imprimerie Royale, Turin, 89 pp.
  • Duchassaing, P. & Michelotti, G. (1864) Supplement au memoire sur les Coralliaires des Antilles. Imprimerie Royale, Turin, 112 pp.
  • Duchassaing, P. (1870) Revue des Zoophytes et des Spongiaires des Antilles. Chez Victor Masson et Fils, Paris, 52 pp.
  • Andres, A. (1883) Le Attinie. Coi Tipi der Salviucci, Roma, 1, 460 pp.
  • McMurrich, J. P. (1889 a) The Actiniaria of the Bahama Islands, W. I. Journal of Morphology, 3, 1 - 80.
  • Carlgren, O. (1895) Jahresbeichte fur 1889, 1890, und 1891 uber die Anthozoen. Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, 61, 235 - 298.
  • Duerden, J. E. (1897) The actiniarian family Aliciidae. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, 20, 1 - 15.
  • Verrill, A. E. (1899 a) Descriptions of imperfectly known and new actinians, with critical notes on other species, II. American Journal of Science and Arts, 7, 41 - 50.
  • Pax, F. (1910) Studien an westindischen Actinien. Zoologische Jahrbucher, 2, 157 - 330.
  • Stephenson, T. A. (1922) On the classification of Actiniaria. Part III. Definitions connected with the forms dealt with in Part II. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, 66, 247 - 319.
  • Schmitt, W. L. (1924) The Macruran, anomuran and stomatopod Crustacea. In: Bijdragen tot de kennis der fauna van Curacao. Resultaten eener reis van Dr. C. J. van der Horst in 1920. Bijdragen tot de Dierkunde, 23, 61 - 81.
  • De Man, J. G. (1888) Bericht uber die von Herrn Dr. J. Brock im indischen Archipel gesammelten Decapoden und Stomatopoden. Archiv fur Naturgeschichte, 53, 289 - 600.
  • Manjarres, G. A. (1977) Contribucion al conocimiento de las actinias en la region de Santa Marta, Colombia. Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas, Punta Betin, 9, 91 - 104.
  • Garateix, A., Salceda, E., Aneiros, A. & Soto, E. (2003) Bunodosoma granulifera: fuente de peptidos con accion sobre canales ionicos. Avicennia, 16, 13 - 21.
  • Nunez R., Garateix, A., Laguna, A., Fernandez, M., Ortiz, E., Llanio, M., Valdes, O., Rodriguez, A. & Menendez, R. (2006) Caribbean marine biodiversity as a source of new compounds of biomedical interest and others industrial applications. Pharmacology online, 3, 111 - 119.
  • Bosc, L. A. G. (1802) Historie Naturalle des Vers. Chez Deterville, Paris, 300 pp.
  • Duerden, J. E. (1902 b) Report of the Actinians of Porto Rico (Investigations of the aquatic resources and fisheries of Porto Rico by the U. S. Fish Commission Steamer Fish Hawk in 1899). Bulletin of the U. S. Fish Commission, 20, 323 - 374.
  • Belem, M. J. & Preslercravo, J. (1973) Contribuicoes ao conhecimento da fauna de cnidarios do Espirito Santo, Brasil I - Consideracoes sobre Actiniaria do Municipio de Aracruz, E. S. Boletim do Museu de Biologia Prof. Mello Leitao, 80, 1 - 14.
  • Fautin, D. G. (2011) Hexacorallians of the World. Available from: http: // geoportal. kgs. ku. edu / hexacoral / anemone 2 / index. cfm (accessed 3 May 2012).
  • Correa, D. D. (1964) Corallimorpharia e Actiniaria do Atlantico Oeste Tropical. Universidade de Sao Paulo, 39 pp.
  • Cairns, S., den Hartog, J. C. & Arneson, C. (1986) Class Anthozoa (Corals, Anemones). In: Sterrer, W. & Schoepfer-Sterrer, C. (Eds.), Marine Fauna and Flora of Bermuda, John Wiley & Sons, New York, pp. 164 - 194.
  • Carlgren, O. & Hedgpeth, J. W. (1952) Actiniaria, Zoantharia and Ceriantharia from shallow water in the northwestern Gulf of Mexico. Publications of the Institute of Marine Science, University of Texas, 2, 143 - 172.
  • McCommas, S. A. & Lester, L. J. (1980) Electrophoretic evaluation of the taxonomic status of two species of sea anemones.
  • Fischer, P. (1874) Recherches sur les Actinies des cotes oceaniques de France. Nouvelles Archives du Museum d'Historie de Paris, 10, 193 - 244.