Ptychophorae
Ptychophorae is a suborder of rhizostome jellyfish, identified in 2013 by Gershwin and Davie.[1]
Ptychophorae | |
---|---|
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Cnidaria |
Class: | Scyphozoa |
Order: | Rhizostomeae |
Suborder: | Ptychophorae Gershwin & Davie, 2013 |
The word Ptychophorae is said to be derived from the Greek ptychos (fold, leaf, layer) and phoras (bearing), in reference to the hooded rhopalia.[1] The proper word for 'fold' in ancient Greek is however ptyx (πτύξ).[2]
Distinctive features
Ptychophorae are distinguished by the following features:
- The body is globular.
- The oral arms coalesce into a single short, ridged column, without scapulets.
- The rhopalia is hooded, lacking typical pits.
- There are 4 velar lappets per octant.
- There 2 asymmetrical ocular lappets per octant.
- The annular muscles are conspicuous.
- The subgenital ostia are very small and round.
- The stomach is circular and large.
- There are 4 radial canals per octant, proximally unbranched, and fluted, and peripherally coalesced into vast open sinus with patchwork of jelly matrix.
Taxonomy
- Family Bazingidae
- Genus Bazinga
The single identified member of this suborder is the Bazinga rieki.
References
- Gershwin, L. & Davie, P.J.F. (30 June 2013). "A remarkable new jellyfish (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa) from coastal Australia, representing a new suborder within the Rhizostomeae. Memoirs of the Queensland Museum — Nature 56(2)" (PDF). Queensland Museum. pp. 625–630. ISSN 0079-8835.
- Liddell, H.G. & Scott, R. (1940). A Greek-English Lexicon revised and augmented throughout by Sir Henry Stuart Jones with the assistance of. Roderick McKenzie. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
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