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Marivagia stellata gen. et sp. nov. (Scyphozoa: Rhizostomeae: Cepheidae), another alien jellyfish from the Mediterranean coast of Israel
Author(s) -
Bella S. Galil,
LisaAnn Gershwin,
Jacob Douek,
Baruch Rinkevich
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
aquatic invasions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.628
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1798-6540
pISSN - 1818-5487
DOI - 10.3391/ai.2010.5.4.01
Subject(s) - jellyfish , scyphozoa , biology , alien , mediterranean climate , mediterranean sea , cnidaria , indian ocean , fishery , zoology , ecology , oceanography , coral , politics , citizenship , political science , law , geology
Two specimens of an unknown jellyfish species were collected in Bat Gallim and Beit Yannai, on the Mediterranean coast of Israel, in June and July 2010. Morphological characters identified it as a cepheid (Cnidaria, Scyphozoa, Rhizostomeae). However, the specimens showed remarkable differences from other cepheid genera; unlike Cephea and Netrostoma it lacks warts or knobs centrally on the exumbrella and filaments on oral disk and between mouths, and it differs from Cotylorhiza in its proximally loose anastomosed radial canals and in lacking stalked suckers and filaments on the moutharms. We thus describe it herein as Marivagia stellata gen. et sp. nov. We also present the results of molecular analyses based on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I (COI) and 28S ribosomal DNA, which support its placement among the Cepheidae and also provide its barcode signature. This new find is the fourth introduced scyphozoan species recorded in the Mediterranean. The presence of a sexually mature specimen collected as far back as 2006, and the occurrence of the species this summer at sites nearly 90 kms apart, indicate the existence of an established population.

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