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Image of Bougainvillia superciliaris (L. Agassiz 1849)
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Bougainvillia superciliaris (L. Agassiz 1849)

Asexual Reproduction

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
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Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Breeding Season

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Woods Hole, Maine
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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Care of Adults

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Living Material

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Methods of Observation

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Sexual Reproduction

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Description

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The manubrium, gonads and bulbs are dark red in color; ocelli are black.

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Distribution

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Is found in the Barents Sea, White Sea, Kara Sea, and Bering Sea.

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Ecology

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Neritic, cold-water species.

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Life Cycle

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Hydroid Bougainvillia superciliaris Hartlaub.

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Morphology

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Umbrella almost ball-shaped, with very thick walls. Radial canals very wide. Bulbs are half-sickle in shape, rarely have more than 15 highly contractible tentacles. The base of each tentacle carries large ocelli on the inner side. Gastric stem is well developed. Manubrium is cube-shaped; carries 4 mouth lobes, which divide dichotomically up to 4-5 times.
4 gonads are located above the mouth lobes.

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Size

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Height and width up to 7-9 mm.

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Bougainvillia superciliaris

provided by wikipedia EN

Bougainvillia superciliaris is a marine invertebrate, a species of athecate hydroid. It belongs to the Bougainvillidae family. It can be confused with Rathkea octopunctata, but differs from it in four bundles of tentacles of the outer circle.

Distribution

This hydromedusae relates to сircumpolar Arctic-boreal species. It is found in the seas of the Arctic basin (Barents sea, Kara sea, Bering sea), in north Atlantic, in the North Pacific.[1] In the White sea this jellyfish is ubiquitous, but more numerous in shallow water lips. Polypoid generation in the White sea practically is poorly investigated[2]

Morphology

The bell is transparent and has a spherical shape. Its size is 4-8 mm (maximum 9.5 mm) in adult jellyfish. Recently appeared jellyfish are 1-2 mm. Tentacles are arranged in groups. Four extended bases on the edge of the bell carry 11-22 tentacles. One black eye is located at the base of each tentacle. Common expanded bases of tentacles are brownish. Manubrium is brown with reddish tinge, darker in males and whitish in females after forming eggs and planulas on it. Short and wide oral proboscis carries a mouth with four bundles of oral tentacles. They are short, dichotomically branched and end with a group of stinging cells. Mouth leads to a bulky stomach, cross-shaped in cross-section. It can open the entire width of the stomach or almost completely close. Gonads are formed on the oral proboscis. Polyps carry filamentous tentacles.[2]

Feeding

This jellyfish feed on various planktonic crustaceans: Cirripedia nauplii, adult Copepods Oithona similis and Microsetella norvegica, larval stages of Copepods Pseudocalanus minutus and other crustaceans.[3]

Reproduction

Gestation of eggs by females is timed to the warming up period of surface layers of the sea, when the temperature rises to 10-15°C. By the end of June eggs turn into ciliated planula larvae, which start an independent life in the water column. At this time jellyfish stop eating, the walls of their stomachs are thinning, and their tentacles stick together and hang motionless. Planula settle and form bottom colonies.[2] Jellyfish exhibits both asexual and sexual reproduction by budding during hydroid stage and releasing gametes in medusae stages.[1]

Behaviour

Most of the time jellyfish hangs in the water column or it is carried over by tidal currents near the surface of the sea. Tentacles are spread out and form a wide cone. Periods of rest alternate with periods of activity when jellyfish with spiral twisted tentacles swim from place to place. Planktonic crustaceans encounter stinging cells on tentacles of the outer circle of the jellyfish. Then jellyfish bends the edge of the bell and passes the victim to the inner circle of tentacles, after which it opens its mouth and, smoothly moving the victim in the cluster of tentacles of the inner circle, swallows the prey.[2]

Ecology

Jellyfish are found regularly in May and June. In sunny quiet days they are numerous at the very surface of the sea. In cloudy or windy days, jellyfish are usually not visible. Seen to be preyed on by Aequorea and other medusivorous hydromedusae.[4]

References

  1. ^ a b "Bougainvillia superciliaris". www.sealifebase.ca. Retrieved 2020-05-27.
  2. ^ a b c d Флора и фауна Белого моря: иллюстрированный атлас (in Russian). МГУ. 2010. ISBN 978-5-87317-672-4.
  3. ^ Cairns, S. D.; Calder, D. R.; Brinckmann-Voss, A.; Castro, C. B.; Fautin, D. G.; Pugh, P. R.; Mills, C. E.; Jaap, W. C.; Arai, M. N. (2002). Common and scientific names of aquatic invertebrates from the United States and Canada: Cnidaria and Ctenophora. 2nd ed. Vol. 28. S. D. Cairns, D. R. Calder, A. Brinckmann-Voss, C. B. Castro, D. G. Fautin, P. R. Pugh. American Fisheries Society.
  4. ^ Wrobel, David; Mills, Claudia, eds. (1998). Pacific Coast pelagic invertebrates: a guide to the common gelatinous animals. Monterey, CA: Sea Challengers : Monterey Bay Aquarium. ISBN 978-0-930118-23-5. OCLC 37713038.
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Bougainvillia superciliaris: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Bougainvillia superciliaris is a marine invertebrate, a species of athecate hydroid. It belongs to the Bougainvillidae family. It can be confused with Rathkea octopunctata, but differs from it in four bundles of tentacles of the outer circle.

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Biology

provided by World Register of Marine Species
colonial

Reference

van der Land, J. (ed). (2008). UNESCO-IOC Register of Marine Organisms (URMO).

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WoRMS Editorial Board
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Jacob van der Land [email]

Distribution

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Bay of Fundy; Atlantic coast of Nova Scotia; Newfoundland and Labrador (Western slope of Newfoundland, including southern part of the Strait of Belle Isle but excluding the upper 50 m in the area southwest of Newfoundland); Cobscook Bay

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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Kennedy, Mary [email]

Habitat

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upper epipelagic

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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WoRMS Editorial Board
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Kennedy, Mary [email]