Anthomedusae

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Athecate hydroids
Lower left, top right: Aspects of Tiara pileata (Filifera: Clavidae)
Lower right: Aspect of Stomotoca pterophylla (Filifera: Pandeidae).
From Kunstformen der Natur by Ernst Haeckel (1904)
Scientific classification e
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Hydrozoa
Subclass: Leptolinae
Order: Anthomedusae
Haeckel, 1879
Suborders

Capitata
Filifera

Synonyms
  • Anthomedusa Haeckel, 1879
  • Anthoathecata Cornelius, 1992
  • Anthoathecatae Cornelius, 1992 (emendation)
  • Athecata Hincks, 1868
  • Athecatae Hincks, 1868 (emendation)
  • Gymnoblastea Allman, 1871
  • Hydromedusa
  • Hydromedusae
  • Stylasterina Hickson and England, 1905
  • Stylasterinae Hickson and England, 1905 (emendation)

Anthomedusae or Anthomedusa, the athecate hydroids, are an order of the Hydrozoa, a class of marine invertebrates belonging to the phylum Cnidaria. A profusion of alternate scientific names exists for this long-known, heavily discussed and spectactular group - it has also been called Gymnoblastea, or, with or without an emended ending "-ae", Anthoathecata, Athecata, Hydromedusa or Stylasterina. There are about 1,200 species worldwide.[1]

These hydrozoans always have a polyp stage. Their hydranths grow either solitary or in colonies. There is no firm perisarc around the polyp body. The medusae, or jellyfish, are solitary animals, with tentacles arising from the bell margin, lacking statocysts but possessing radial canals. Their gonads are on the manubrium ("handle").[1]

Except in Eudendriidae and Laingiidae, the cnidome has desmonemes.[1]

Contents

[edit] Systematics[2]

It is not clear whether Stylaster californicus belongs in the Filifera.
Upper left: Blue Top Snail (Calliostoma ligatum).

Their close relationship to the Leptomedusae has been long known, but it was formerly believed that these two were also close to the Limnomedusae. Actually, their closest relative are the highly advanced Siphonophorae, whereas the Limnomedusae are simply a rather primitive group that is not very closely related to these three Leptolinae but might actually belong to the Trachylinae subclass. The family Clathrozoellidae is placed with the Filifera in some treatments; in others it is placed in the Leptomedusae and sometimes even synonymized with their family Clathrozoidae. The supposed athecate family Monobrachiidae apparently belongs in the Olindiasidae of the Limnomedusae.

The Porpitidae are highly aberrant group, and were at one time considered an own order "Chondrophora". But actually they are derived from Zancleida. Halammohydridae and Otohydridae, sometimes placed here, actually appear to be trachyline hydrozoans of the order Actinulidae. Similarly, the Laingiidae, also long considered a distinct order Laingiomedusae, might belong in the Pandeida.

[edit] Infraorders and families

Basal and incertae sedis Anthomedusae

Hydractinia epiconcha belongs to the Margelina in the suborder Filifera.
The well-known freshwater polyp Hydra viridis is a member of the Capitata, where it belongs to the Moerisiida.

Suborder Capitata

Basal or incertae sedis

Infraorder Moerisiida

Infraorder Sphaerocorynida

Infraorder Tubulariida

Infraorder Zancleida

Suborder Filifera

Basal or incertae sedis

Infraorder Margelina

Infraorder Pandeida


[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c Schuchert (2008)
  2. ^ Schuchert (2008), MarineSpecies.org (2008)

[edit] References

[edit] External links

Personal tools
Namespaces
Variants
Actions
Navigation
Interaction
Toolbox
Print/export
Languages