Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-mkpzs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-27T07:19:20.507Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New records of gelatinous zooplankton from an oceanic island in the Eastern Tropical Pacific

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 May 2017

Marco Corrales-Ugalde*
Affiliation:
Centro de Investigación en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología (CIMAR), Ciudad de la Investigación, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, 11501-2060 San José, Costa Rica Oregon Institute of Marine Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, USA
Andrés J. Quesada
Affiliation:
Salish Sea Research Center, Northwest Indian College, 2522 Kwina Road, Bellingham, WA 98226, USA
Beatriz Naranjo-Elizondo
Affiliation:
Centro de Investigación en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología (CIMAR), Ciudad de la Investigación, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, 11501-2060 San José, Costa Rica Escuela de Biología, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, 11501-2060 San José, Costa Rica
Jorge Cortés
Affiliation:
Centro de Investigación en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología (CIMAR), Ciudad de la Investigación, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, 11501-2060 San José, Costa Rica Escuela de Biología, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, 11501-2060 San José, Costa Rica
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: M. Corrales-Ugalde, Centro de Investigación en Ciencias del Mar y Limnología (CIMAR), Ciudad de la Investigación, Universidad de Costa Rica, San Pedro, 11501-2060 San José, Costa Rica email: mcugalde88@gmail.com

Abstract

Gelatinous zooplankton are an abundant and diverse group of animals in the pelagic environment. However, knowledge of species diversity and spatial distributions, as well as their ecological role, is scarce. We present information of epi- and mesopelagic gelatinous zooplankton recorded by the ‘DeepSee’ submersible between 2006 and 2012 at Isla del Coco (Cocos Island), Costa Rica, an oceanic island in the Eastern Tropical Pacific. Two species of scyphomedusae, three species of hydromedusae, two genera of siphonophores, and two species of ctenophores were observed in the videos, at depths between 50 and 400 m. None of these species had been previously recorded in the waters around the island. Furthermore, except for the jellyfish Pelagia noctiluca and a siphonophore in the genus Praya, all are new records for Costa Rican waters. This study also includes the first record of the cnidarians Modeeria rotunda, Solmissus sp., Halitrephes maasi and Apolemia spp., and the ctenophore Thalassocalyce inconstans in the Eastern Tropical Pacific. We show that surveys in regions with little information about gelatinous zooplankton may broaden our knowledge of their natural history and may result in new records of gelatinous species.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 2017 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

REFERENCES

Agassiz, L. (1860) Contributions to the natural history of the United States of America, Vol. 3. Boston: Little, Brown & Co.Google Scholar
Alvariño, A. (1971) Siphonophores of the Pacific with a review of the world distribution. Bulletin of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography 16, 1432.Google Scholar
Alvariño, A. (1972) Zooplancton del Caribe, Golfo de México y regiones adyacentes del Pacífico. México: Memorias del IV Congreso Nacional de Oceanografía, pp. 223247.Google Scholar
Alvariño, A. (1974) Distribution of siphonophores in the regions adjacent to the Suez and Panama canals. Fisheries Bulletin 22, 4176.Google Scholar
Angel, M.V. (2003) The pelagic environment of the open ocean. In Tyler, P.A. (ed.) Ecosystems of the World 28. Ecosystems of the Deep Oceans. Amsterdam: Elsevier Science B.V., pp. 3979.Google Scholar
Angulo, A., Naranjo-Elizondo, B., Corrales-Ugalde, M. and Cortés, J. (2014) First record of the genus Paracaristius (Perciformes: Caristiidae) from the Pacific of Central America, with comments on their association with the siphonophore Praya reticulata (Siphonophorae: Prayidae). Marine Biodiversity Records 7(e132), 16.Google Scholar
Bigelow, H.B. (1909) Reports on the scientific results of the expedition to the eastern tropical Pacific, in charge of Alexander Agassiz, by the U.S. Fish Commission steamer “Albatross”, from October, 1904, to March, 1905. XVI. The Medusae. Memoirs of the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard College 37, 1243.Google Scholar
Bouillon, J. (1999) Hydromedusae. In Boltovskoy, D. (ed.) South Atlantic zooplankton. Leiden: Backhuys Publishers, pp. 385465.Google Scholar
Brandt, J.F. (1835) Prodromus descriptionis animalium ab Mertensio in orbis terrarum circumnavigatione observatorum. Fascicule I. Recueil Actes des séances publiques de l'Acadadémie Impériale des Science de St. Petersbourg 183, 201275.Google Scholar
Cortés, J. (2012) Marine biodiversity of an Eastern Tropical Pacific oceanic island, Isla del Coco, Costa Rica. Revista de Biología Tropical 60 (Supplement 3), 131185.Google Scholar
Cortés, J. and Blum, S. (2008) Life to 450 m depth at Isla del Coco, Costa Rica. Revista de Biología Tropical 56 (Supplement 2), 189206.Google Scholar
Cortés, J., Enochs, I.C., Sibaja-Cordero, J., Hernández, L., Alvarado, J.J., Breedy, O., Cruz-Barraza, J.A., Esquivel-Garrote, O., Fernández-García, C., Hermosillo, A., Kaiser, K.L., Medina-Rosas, P., Morales-Ramírez, Á., Pacheco, C., Pérez-Matus, A., Reyes-Bonilla, H., Riosmena-Rodríguez, R., Sánchez-Noguera, C., Wieters, E. and Zapata, F.A. (2017) Marine biodiversity of Eastern Tropical Pacific coral reefs. In Glynn, P.W., Manzello, D. and Enochs, I. (eds) Coral reefs of the world 8. Coral reefs of the Eastern Pacific: persistence and loss in a dynamic environment. Dordrecht: Springer Science+Business Media, pp. 203250.Google Scholar
Costello, M.J., Coll, M., Danovaro, R., Halpin, P., Ojaveer, H. and Miloslavich, P. (2010) A census of marine biodiversity knowledge, resources, and future challenges. PLoS ONE 5 (Issue 8), 115.Google Scholar
Eschscholtz, F. (1829) System der Acalephen. Eine ausführliche Beschreibung aller Medusenartigen Strahltiere. Berlin: Ferdinand Dümmler.Google Scholar
Forsskål, P. (1775) Descriptiones Animalium, Avium, Amphibiorum, Piscium, Insectorum, Vermium; quae in Itinere Orientali Observavit Petrus Forskål. Prof. Haun. Post Mortem Auctoris Ed. Carsten Neibuhr. Adjuncta est Materia Medica Kahirina atque Tabula Maris Rubri Geographica. Hauniae, pp. 120 + i–xxxiv + 1–164.Google Scholar
Gasca, R. (2002) Lista faunística y bibliografía comentada de los sifonóforos (Cnidaria) de México. Anales del Instituto de Biología de la Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México 73, 123143.Google Scholar
Haeckel, E. (1879–80) Das System der Medusen. 1, 1–360, 2, 361–672. Jena: Gustav Fischer.Google Scholar
Hamner, W.M., Madin, L.P., Alldredge, A.L., Gilmer, R.W. and Hamner, P.P. (1975) Underwater observations of gelatinous zooplankton: sampling problems, feeding biology, and behavior. Limnology and Oceanography 20, 907917.Google Scholar
Kramp, P. (1961) Synopsis of the medusae of the world. Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom 40, 7382.Google Scholar
Larson, R.J. (1990) Scyphomedusae and cubomedusae from the Eastern Pacific. Bulletin of Marine Science 47, 546556.Google Scholar
Larson, R.J., Madin, L.P. and Harbison, G.R. (1988) In situ observations of deepwater medusae in the genus Deepstaria, with a description of D. reticulum. sp. nov. Journal of the Marine Biology Association of the United Kingdom 68, 689699.Google Scholar
Lindsay, D., Umetsu, M., Grossmann, M., Miyake, H. and Yamamoto, H. (2015) The gelatinous macroplankton community at the Hatoma Knoll Hydrothermal Vent. In Ishibashi, J., Okino, K. and Sunamura, M. (eds) Subseafloor biosphere linked to hydrothermal systems: TAIGA concept. Tokyo: Springer, pp. 639666.Google Scholar
Longhurst, A.R. (2001) Pelagic biogeography. In Steele, J.H. (ed.) Encyclopedia of ocean sciences. Oxford: Elsevier, pp. 21142122.Google Scholar
Lucas, J. and Critch, P. (1974) Life in the oceans. New York, NY: Thames & Hudson.Google Scholar
Lucas, C.H., Jones, D.O.B., Hollyhead, C.J., Condon, R.H., Duarte, C.M., Graham, W.M., Robinson, K.L., Pitt, K.A., Schildhauer, M. and Regetz, J. (2014) Gelatinous zooplankton biomass in the global oceans: geographic variation and environmental drivers. Global Ecology and Biogeography 23 (Supplement 7), 701714.Google Scholar
Madin, L.P. and Harbison, G.R. (1978) Thalassocalyce inconstans, new genus and species, an enigmatic ctenophore representing a new family and order. Bulletin of Marine Sciences 28, 680687.Google Scholar
Mapstone, G.M. (2009) Siphonophora (Cnidaria) of Canadian Pacific waters. Ottawa: National Research Council Press.Google Scholar
Mathews, D.C. (1954) Records of Hawaiian Ctenophora. Transactions of the American Microscopical Society 73, 282284.Google Scholar
Matsumoto, G.I., Raskoff, K.A. and Lindsay, D.J. (2003) Tiburonia granrojo n. sp., a mesopelagic scyphomedusa from the Pacific Ocean representing the type of a new subfamily (Class Scyphozoa: Order Semaeostomae: Family Ulmaridae: Subfamily Tiburoniinae subfam. nov.). Marine Biology 143, 7377.Google Scholar
Mianzan, H. (1999) Ctenophora. In Boltovskoy, D. (ed.) South Atlantic zooplankton. Leiden: Backhuys Publishers, pp. 561573.Google Scholar
Mianzan, H. and Cornelius, P. (1999) Cubomedusae and Scyphomedusae. In Boltovskoy, D. (ed.) South Atlantic zooplankton. Leiden: Backhuys Publishers, pp. 513559.Google Scholar
Mills, C., and Goy, J. (1988) In situ observations of the behavior of mesopelagic Solmissus Narcomedusae (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa). Bulletin of Marine Science 43, 739751.Google Scholar
Morales-Ramírez, A. (2008) Caracterización cualitativa del zooplancton del Área de Conservación Marina Isla del Coco (ACMIC), Océano Pacífico de Costa Rica. Revista de Biología Tropical 56 (Supplement 2), 159169.Google Scholar
Pugh, P.R. (1999) Siphonophorae. In Boltovskoy, D. (ed.) South Atlantic zooplankton. Leiden: Backhuys Publishers, pp. 467511.Google Scholar
Pielou, E.C. (1979) Biogeography. New York, NY: John Wiley & Sons.Google Scholar
Quoy, J.R.C. and Gaimard, J.P. (1827) Observations zoologiques faites à bord de l'Astrolabe, en mai 1826, dans le détroit de Gibraltar. Annales des sciences naturelles 10, 112, 172–193, 225–239.Google Scholar
Quoy, J.R.C. and Gaimard, J.P. (1833) Zoologie: Zoophytes. In Tatsu, J. (ed.) Voyage de la corvette de l “Astrolabe”, exécuté par l'ordre du roi pendant les années 1826–1829 sous le commadement de M.J. Dumont d'Urville. Paris: Tatsu Imprimeur, pp. 1390, pls. 1–26.Google Scholar
Raskoff, K.A. (2002) Foraging, prey capture and gut contents of the mesopelagic narcomedusa Solmissus spp. (Cnidaria, Hydrozoa). Marine Biology 141, 10991107.Google Scholar
Raskoff, K.A. and Matsumoto, G.I. (2004) Stellamedusa ventana, a new pelagic scyphomedusa from the eastern Pacific representing a new subfamily, the Stellamedusinae. Journal of the Marine Biology Association of the United Kingdom 84, 3742.Google Scholar
Richardson, A.J. (2008) In hot water: zooplankton and climate change. ICES Journal of Marine Science 65, 279295.Google Scholar
Robison, B.H. (2004) Deep pelagic biology. Journal of Experimental Marine Biology and Ecology 300, 253272.Google Scholar
Rodríguez-Sáenz, K. and Gasca, R. (2009) Siphonophores. In Wehrtmann, I.S. and Cortés, J. (eds) Marine biodiversity of Costa Rica, Central America. Berlin: Springer Science-Business Media, pp. 151156, (text), pp. 101–104 (Species list in CD).Google Scholar
Rodríguez-Sáenz, K. and Segura-Puertas, L. (2009) Hydrozoa, Scyphozoa and Cubozoa (Medusozoa). In Wehrtmann, I.S. and Cortés, J. (eds) Marine biodiversity of Costa Rica, Central America. Berlin: Springer Science-Business Media, pp. 143149, (text), pp. 94–100 (Species list in CD).Google Scholar
Rodríguez-Sáenz, K. and Vargas-Zamora, J.A. (2012) Medusae (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa) from a coastal upwelling zone, Culebra Bay, Pacific, Costa Rica. Revista de Biología Tropical 60, 17311748.Google Scholar
Ruiz-Escobar, F., Valadez-Vargas, D.K. and Oliveira, O. (2015) Ctenophores from the Oaxaca coast, including a checklist of species from the Pacific coast of Mexico. Zootaxa 3936, 435445.Google Scholar
Russell, F.S. (1967) On a remarkable new scyphozoan. Journal of the Marine Biology Association of the United Kingdom 47, 469473.Google Scholar
Segura-Puertas, L. (1984) Morfología, sistemática y zoogeografía de las medusas (Cnidaria: Hydrozoa y Sciphozoa) del Pacífico Tropical Oriental. Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México, Publicación Especial, no. 8, 320 pp.Google Scholar
Segura-Puertas, L., Franco-Gordo, C., Suárez-Morales, E., Gasca, R. and Godínez-Domínguez, E. (2010) Summer composition and distribution of the jellyfish (Cnidaria-Medusozoa) in the shelf area off the central Mexican Pacific. Revista Mexicana de Biodiversidad 81, 103112.Google Scholar
Siebert, S., Pugh, P.R., Haddock, S. and Dunn, C. (2013) Re-evaluation of characters in Apolemiidae (Siphonophora), with description of two new species from Monterey Bay, California. Zootaxa 3702, 201232.Google Scholar
Spalding, M.D., Agostini, V.N., Rice, J. and Grant, S.M. (2012) Pelagic provinces of the world: a biogeographic classification of the world's surface pelagic waters. Ocean and Coastal Management 60, 1930.Google Scholar
Stepanjants, S. (1977) Siphonophora of the central part of the Pacific Ocean. In Explorations of the fauna of the seas XX (XXVIII). Marine plankton (systematics and faunistics). pp. 5481.Google Scholar
Suárez, E. and Gasca, R. (1991) Sifonóforos de México. Biología y Ecología. Chetumal, México: Centro de Investigaciones de Quintana Roo (CIQRO).Google Scholar
Swift, H.F., Hamner, W.M., Robison, B.H. and Madin, L.P. (2009) Feeding behavior of the ctenophore Thalassocalyce inconstans: revision of the anatomy of the order Thalassocalycida. Marine Biology 156, 10491056.Google Scholar
Tirado, N. (2012) CDF Checklist of Galapagos comb jellies. In Bungartz, F., Herrera, H., Jaramillo, P., Tirado, N., Jiménez-Uzcátegui, G., Ruiz, D., Guézou, A. and Ziemmeck, F. (eds) Charles Darwin Foundation Galapagos species checklist. Puerto Ayora, Galápagos: Fundación Charles Darwin. http://checklists.datazone.darwinfoundation.org/marine-invertebrates/ctenophora/. Last updated: 27 Nov 2012.Google Scholar
Towanda, T. and Thuesen, E.V. (2006) Ectosymbiotic behavior of Cancer gracilis and its trophic relationships with its host Phacellophora camtschatica and the parasitoid Hyperia medusarum. Marine Ecology Progress Series 315, 221236.Google Scholar
Vicencio-Aguilar, M.E. and Fernández-Álamo, P.R. (1996) Zooplancton del Domo de Costa Rica: taxonomía y biogeografía. Revista de Biología Tropical 44, 631642.Google Scholar
Wrobel, D. and Mills, C. (1998) Pacific Coast pelagic invertebrates: a guide to the common gelatinous animals. Monterey: Global Interprint, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Institute.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: Image

Corrales-Ugalde supplementary material

Corrales-Ugalde supplementary material 1

Download Corrales-Ugalde supplementary material(Image)
Image 912 KB