WoRMS source details
Straehler-Pohl, I. (2019). A new species detected in the collection of the Natural History Museum of Denmark of the Dana Expedition from 1928–30: Carybdea irregularis sp. nov. (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa, Cubomedusae, Carybdeida, Carybdeidae) from French Polynesian waters. Plankton and Benthos Research. 14(4): 261-270.
392551
10.3800/pbr.14.261 [view]
Straehler-Pohl, I.
2019
A new species detected in the collection of the Natural History Museum of Denmark of the Dana Expedition from 1928–30: <i>Carybdea irregularis</i> sp. nov. (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa, Cubomedusae, Carybdeida, Carybdeidae) from French Polynesian waters
Plankton and Benthos Research
14(4): 261-270
Publication
Available for editors [request]
A new carybdeid species, Carybdea irregularis sp. nov., is described from the Dana Expedition 1928–30
collections of the Natural History Museum of Denmark, Copenhagen, originally sampled from French Polynesia. It can
be distinguished from its congeners by the combination of the following morphological features: pedalial canal knee
bend rounded, 2 very narrow velarial canal roots/octant with slim, irregularly shaped canals (no canal resembles another one) and bottle tree-like gastric filaments.
Description, photo and and drawings by Bigelow (1909) on three French Polynesian carybdeid medusae, sampled in
Rikitea Harbor, Mangareva, Gambier Islands (French Polynesia) during the Albatross Expedition in 1905 and identified
by him as “Carybdea rastonii”, fit exactly the anatomical structures of this new species and are therefore designated to it.
Up to now, Carybdea irregularis sp. nov. is the smallest species of the genus Carybdea, maturing with at a bell height
of 15 mm.
Polynesia
Date
action
by
Carybdea irregularis Straehler-Pohl, 2019 (original description)