Aglaophenia latecarinata Allman, 1877
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.3648.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:22089255-436A-4DBB-BD93-1D3C8CF281FE |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.5263470 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/039B197E-FFF2-F56B-E6F9-F9B6FE831755 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Aglaophenia latecarinata Allman, 1877 |
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Aglaophenia latecarinata Allman, 1877 View in CoL
Fig. 14b View FIGURE 14
Aglaophenia late-carinata Allman, 1877: 56 View in CoL [incorrect original spelling].
Aglaophenia latecarinata View in CoL .— Leloup, 1935: 57.— Fraser, 1944: 378.
Type locality. “ Gulf of Mexico ...attached to Gulf Weed ” ( Allman 1877: 56) .
Voucher material. Off St. Lucie Inlet, 27°10.8’N, 80°02.5’W, 21.6 m, 24.vii.1975, on algae, one colony, cormoids up to 1.4 cm high, without gonophores, coll. T. Askew, ROMIZ B1086 GoogleMaps .— Fort Pierce , Fort Pierce Inlet State Park, 27°28’29.5”N, 80°17’25.8”W, on stranded Sargassum fluitans , 14.vii.2012, 28° C, 35‰, collected manually, two colonies, up to 7 mm high, without gonophores, coll. D.R. Calder, ROMIZ B3978 GoogleMaps .
Remarks. Although often reported from hard bottoms, Aglaophenia latecarinata Allman, 1877 is also a conspicuous epibiont of the pelagic gulfweed species Sargassum fluitans ( Calder 1995) . As such it is ubiquitous in the Caribbean Sea (e.g., Leloup 1935; Van Gemerden-Hoogeveen 1965), Gulf of Mexico (e.g., Fraser 1944; Defenbaugh & Hopkins 1973), Florida Current (e.g., Nutting 1895, as Aglaophenia minuta ; Bogle 1975), Gulf Stream (e.g., Burkenroad, in Parr 1939, as A. minuta ; Rackley 1974), and Sargasso Sea (e.g., Broch 1913; Leloup 1937). Colonies on gulfweed are stunted, as with certain other Sargassum associates ( Adams 1960), and they typically reach only about a centimeter in height on that substrate. While the species tends to be a dominant hydroid on S. fluitans , it is much less frequent on S. natans , the other holopelagic species of gulfweed in the North Atlantic ( Calder 1995). Hydroids of A. latecarinata are known to occur as well on flotsam such as plastics ( Calder 1997).
The troubled nomenclature and extensive synonymy of this species have been reviewed elsewhere ( Bogle 1975; Calder 1997; Ansín Agís et al. 2001). The last group of authors also provided detailed distribution records.
Reported distribution. Atlantic coast of Florida. Hollywood, near Miami ( Leloup 1935; Fraser 1944).
Western Atlantic. New England, on pelagic Sargassum ( Fraser 1944) , to Brazil (Oliveira et al. submitted), and including Bermuda and the Sargasso Sea ( Jäderholm 1896; Calder 1993), the Gulf of Mexico ( Calder & Cairns 2009), and the Caribbean Sea ( Galea 2010).
Elsewhere. Warm waters of the eastern Atlantic, Indian Ocean, and western Pacific ( Ansín Agís et al. 2001; Park 2012).
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Aglaophenia latecarinata Allman, 1877
Calder, Dale R. 2013 |
Aglaophenia latecarinata
Fraser, C. M. 1944: 378 |
Leloup, E. 1935: 57 |
Aglaophenia late-carinata
Allman, G. J. 1877: 56 |