Bartholomea annulata ( Le Sueur, 1817 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.203987 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6180921 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/35648787-DB10-FFB9-88E5-FD4CFE1FFC97 |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2016-04-13 13:43:36, last updated 2024-11-27 02:50:03) |
scientific name |
Bartholomea annulata ( Le Sueur, 1817 ) |
status |
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Bartholomea annulata ( Le Sueur, 1817) View in CoL
( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 , Table 2 View TABLE 2 )
Actinia annulata Le Sueur, 1817: 172 View in CoL –173.
Actinia solifera Le Sueur, 1817: 173 .
Paractis solifera Milne-Edwards, 1857: 249 –250.
Dysactis annulata Milne-Edwards, 1857: 262 .
Bartholomea solifera Duchassaing & Michelotti, 1864: 39 View in CoL , pl. VI, fig.14.
Bartholomea Solifera View in CoL [sic] Duchassaing, 1870: 21.
Aiptasia solifera Andres, 1883: 386 View in CoL .
Aiptasia annulata Andres, 1883: 392 View in CoL .
Aiptasia annulata solifera Verrill, 1907: 251 View in CoL .
Bartholomea annulata Stephenson, 1920: 532 View in CoL .
Carlgreniella robusta Watzl, 1922: 60 View in CoL , 66, 67–70, 73, 75, pl. I, fig. 6.
Aiptasia arrulata Atoda, 1954: 123 View in CoL .
Batholomea annulata Chen, Soong & Chen, 2008: 37 View in CoL .
Material examined.— Puerto Morelos (20°52’0.39” N, 86°51’41.67” W; 5 specimens), GoogleMaps Majahual (18°42’28.18” N, 87°42’36.92” W; 1 specimen); GoogleMaps Punta Cancún (21°9’10.5” N, 86°44’41.2” W; 1 specimen); GoogleMaps Isla Mujeres (21°11’55.06” N, 86°43’35.88” W; 2 specimens), GoogleMaps Akumal (20°23’39.68” N, 87°18’47.39” W; 1 specimen); GoogleMaps Xcalak (18°15’53.55” N, 87°49’43.20” W; 1 specimen); GoogleMaps Isla Contoy (21°28’16.98” N, 86°47’27.87” W; 1 specimen). GoogleMaps
Diagnosis.—Fully expanded tentacles and oral disc 100–150 mm in diameter. Oral disc 35–46 mm in diameter, smooth, flat, brownish, semi-transparent, with small white, yellow and green dots; sometimes base of first cycle of tentacles with triangular spots ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 B). Tentacles with distinct white spiral bands, more concentrated distally; epidermis in spiral bands thickened ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 A–C, F). Tentacles 48–96, hexamerously arranged in four to six cycles, inner ones longer than outer ones, long, slender, brown, semi-transparent ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 B–D). Column elongated, 12–45 mm in height, 15–38 mm in diameter, divided into capitulum and scapus ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 C). Capitulum smooth, light to dark brown, with white and yellow spots. Scapus smooth but corrugate in appearance when contracted. One or two rows of cinclides in mid-scapus. Pedal disc well developed, 8–24 mm in diameter ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 D). Pedal disc and scapus light brown or beige, semi-transparent, mesenterial insertions visible. Mesenteries hexamerously arranged in four cycles (48 pairs in specimens examined): first cycle perfect, others imperfect. No gametogenic tissue observed in specimens reviewed. Two pairs of directives each attached to a well developed siphonoglyph ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 E). Retractor muscles strong, restricted ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 E); parietobasilar poorly developed. Basilar muscles poorly developed. Marginal sphincter muscle not observed. Longitudinal muscles of tentacles ectodermal. Acontia white, with basitrichs and microbasic p -amastigophores. Zooxanthellae present. Cnidom: basitrichs, holotrichs, microbasic p- amastigophores and spirocysts ( Figure 10 View FIGURE 10 G–T; see Table 2 View TABLE 2 ).
Natural history.— Bartholomea annulata lives in shallow waters inside crevices of rocks and coral rubble, with only its tentacles above the substrate, in the lagoon and back-reef zones, often between 1–15 m but observed down to 20 m. Often observed in caves and crevices at the interface between hard and sandy substratum. Bartholomea annulata is commonly associated with the shrimp Ancylomenes pedersoni and the pistol shrimp Alpheus armatus Rathbun, 1901 ( Manjarrés 1977; Ritson-Williams & Paul 2007). Alpheus armatus protects the anemone from predation by the fire-worm Hermodice carunculata ( Pallas, 1766) and cleans the shelter, allowing the anemone to expand and retract its tentacles completely when disturbed; the anemone protects the shrimp from predation and provides it lodging ( Smith 1977). Other crustaceans reported in association with B. annulata are Periclimenes yucatanicus , P. rathbunae , Thor amboinensis , Alpheus immaculatus Knowlton & Keller, 1983 and Alpheus polystictus Knowlton & Keller, 1985 ( Manjarrés 1978, Knowlton & Keller 1983, 1985, 1986; Ritson-Williams & Paul 2007).
Distribution.—From Bermuda to Barbados, along the entire Caribbean Sea (see Table 1). In the Mexican Caribbean, this species is reported in Cozumel and Puerto Morelos reefs (INE 2000; Sánchez-Rodríguez et al. 2001, 2006; Jordán-Dahlgren 2008), but this is the first time recorded for Majahual, Punta Cancún, Isla Mujeres, Akumal, Xcalak, and Isla Contoy reefs.
Remarks.—Currently Bartholomea has three valid species, of which B. annulata and B. werneri Watzl, 1922 are reported for the Caribbean Sea ( Fautin 2011). According to Watzl (1922), the spiral bands in the tentacles of B. werneri are more widely spaced than those in B. annulata . Further studies are needed to establish if the difference in the arrangement of the spiral bands of both species represents a species level difference or intraspecific variation.
Andres, A. (1883) Le Attinie. Coi Tipi der Salviucci, Roma, 1, 460 pp.
Atoda, K. (1954) The development of the sea anemone, Diadumene luciae, reproduced by the pedal laceration. Science Reports of the Tohoku University, 20 (2), 123 - 129.
Chen, C., Soong, K, & Chen., C. A. (2008) The smallest oocytes among broadcast-spawning actiniarians and a unique lunar reproductive cycle in a unisexual population of the sea anemone, Aiptasia pulchella (Anthozoa: Actiniaria). Zoological Studies, 47 (1), 37 - 45.
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.
Fautin, D. G. (2011) Hexacorallians of the World. Available from: http: // geoportal. kgs. ku. edu / hexacoral / anemone 2 / index. cfm (accessed 3 May 2012).
Jordan-Dahlgren, E. (2008) Arrecifes Coralinos de Cozumel. In: Mejia, L. M. (Eds.) Biodiversidad Acuatica de la Isla de Cozumel. Plaza & Valdez - UQROO, 418 pp.
Knowlton, N. & Keller, B. D. (1983) A new, sibling species of snapping shrimp associated with the caribbean sea anemone Bartholomea annulata. Bulletin of Marine Science, 33, 353 - 362.
Knowlton, N. & Keller, B. D. (1985) Two more sibling species of alpheid shrimps associated with the Caribbean sea anemones Bartholomea annulata and Heteractis lucida. Bulletin of Marine Science, 37, 893 - 904.
Knowlton, N. & Keller, B. D. (1986) Larvae which fall far short of their potential: Highly localized recruitment in an alpheid shrimp with extended larval development. Bulletin of Marine Science, 39, 213 - 223.
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.
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.
Manjarres, G. A. (1978) Nuevos encuentros de actinias (Hexacorallia) en la region de Santa Marta, Colombia. Anales del Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas, Punta Betin, 10, 127 - 132.
Milne-Edwards, H. (1857) Historie Naturelle des Coralliaries ou Polypes Proprement Dits, vol. 1. Librairie Encyclopedique de Roret, Paris, 326 pp.
Pallas, P. S. (1766) Miscellanea Zoologica, quibus novi imprimis atque obscuri animalium species describuntur et observationibus iconibusque illustrantur. Hagi Comitum, 224 pp.
Ritson-Williams, R. & Paul, V. J. (2007) Periclimenes yucatanicus and Periclimenes rathbunae on unusual corallimorph host. Coral Reefs, 26, 147.
Sanchez-Rodriguez, J., Zugasti-Cruz, A. & Burnett, J. W. (2001) Cutaneous stings from Bartholomea annulata. Contact Dermatitis, 44, 314 - 315.
Smith, W. L. (1977) Beneficial behavior of a symbiotic shrimp to its host anemone. Bulletin of Marine Science, 27, 343 - 346.
Stephenson, T. A. (1920) On the classification of Actiniaria. Part I. Forms with acontia and forms with a mesogleal sphincter. Quarterly Journal of Microscopical Science, 64, 425 - 574.
Verrill, A. E. (1907) Additions to the fauna of the Bermudas from the Yale Expedition of 1901, with notes on other species. In: Verrill, A. E. (Eds.), Zoology of Bermuda, New Haven, Connecticut, pp. 15 - 62.
Watzl, O. (1922) Die Actiniarien der Bahamainseln. Arkiv fur Zoologi, 14, 1 - 89.
FIGURE 10. — Bartholomea annulata. (A) Live specimen in natural habitat. (B) Oral view. (C) Lateral view. (D) Pedal disc view. (E) Cross section through distal column. (F) Longitudinal section through tentacle. (G – T) Cnidae. — tentacle: (G) basitrich, (H) microbasic p - amastigophore, (I) spirocyst; actinopharynx: (J) basitrich, (K) microbasic p - amastigophore; column: (L) basitrich, (M) microbasic p - amastigophore, (N) holotrich; filament: (O) basitrich, (P) microbasic p - amastigophore, (Q) microbasic p - amastigophore, acontia: (R) basitrich, (S) basitrich, (T) microbasic p - amastigophore. Abbreviations. — ca: capitulum, ci: cinclides, dm: directive mesenteries, nb: nematocyst batteries, od: oral disc, pd: pedal disc, rm: retractor muscles, s: siphonoglyph, sc: scapus, t: tentacle, z: zooxanthellae. Scale bars. — A – D 10 mm; E – F: 200 µm; G – S: 25 µm, T: 17.5 µm.
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.
Kingdom |
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Class |
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Order |
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SubOrder |
Nynantheae |
InfraOrder |
Thenaria |
SuperFamily |
Metridioidea |
Family |
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Genus |
Bartholomea annulata ( Le Sueur, 1817 )
Gonzalez-Muñoz, Ricardo, Simões, Nuno, Sanchez-Rodriguez, Judith, Rodriguez, Estefania & Segura-Puertas, Lourdes 2012 |
Batholomea annulata
Chen 2008: 37 |
Carlgreniella robusta
Atoda 1954: 123 |
Watzl 1922: 60 |
Bartholomea annulata
Stephenson 1920: 532 |
Aiptasia annulata solifera
Verrill 1907: 251 |
Aiptasia annulata
Andres 1883: 392 |
Bartholomea solifera
Andres 1883: 386 |
Duchassaing 1870: 21 |
Duchassaing 1864: 39 |
Paractis solifera
Milne-Edwards 1857: 249 |
Milne-Edwards 1857: 262 |
Actinia annulata
Le 1817: 172 |
Actinia solifera
Le 1817: 173 |
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