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Semper's (zoanthid) larvae: pelagic life,parentage and other problems
Authors:Ryland  J S  Putron  Samantha de  Scheltema  R S  Chimonides  P J  Zhadan  D G
Abstract:Semper's larvae were obtained from <300 out of sim1800 plankton tows taken in the world's oceans (1964–1993). Zoanthellae (larvae of Sphenopidae) occurred at 217 stations and zoanthinae (larvae of Zoanthidae) at 86, the two larval types showing distributions clearly delimited by a minimum sea temperature (sim22 °C for zoanthellae, sim18 °C for zoanthinae; a statistically significant difference, P<0.001). Length of formalin-fixed zoanthellae was sim2–8.6 mm and of zoanthinae sim1.5–5.9 mm. Endodermal zooxanthellae were present in 9/24 zoanthinae but in no zoanthellae (of 19). Three larvae contained an endo-commensal/parasitic amphipod. Septa were externally visible in larger zoanthinae and were counted in transverse sections of other larvae, a majority of which (both kinds) had 12 septa, the normal maximum. The pattern was brachycnemic in 40/43 larvae and anomalous (but non-macrocnemic) in three. If macrocnemic genera reproduce by Semper's larvae, they should have been represented in such a large sample. The distribution of adult Epizoanthus was examined: many species are deep sea (recorded down to sim5000 m) but shallow-water species are relatively plentiful in, for example, the Adriatic and North Seas. No Semper's larva has ever been recorded from either. Some Parazoanthus species also occur in shallow water, especially associated with western Atlantic reef sponges. If they produce Semper's larvae, these have never been found. It is probable that macrocnemic zoanthids settle from planulae that do not develop into recognizable zoanthellae or zoanthinae.
Keywords:larval types  distributions  sea temperature  zooxanthellae  deep sea  Epizoanthus
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