Catostylidae

Catostylidae is a family of jellyfish. Members of this family are characterized by their thick, sausage-like oral arms.[1]

Catostylidae
Catostylus mosaicus, blubber jellyfish
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Scyphozoa
Order: Rhizostomeae
Suborder: Daktyliophorae
Family: Catostylidae
Gegenbaur, 1857
Genera
See text

Description

Members of the family Catostylidae are small marine jellyfish with domed bells. The eight short oral arms are broad and three-sided. There is a network of branching canals linked with the primary ring canal, but these are not joined to the gastrovascular cavity except through the sixteen or thirty two radial canals. Some of these radial canals do not extend to the edge of the bell. There are eight sense organs, known as rhopalia, which have canals extending to the margin of the bell.[2]

These jellyfish swim in jerks by contracting their circular and radial muscles, which decreases the volume of water enclosed under the bell, before relaxing them again and repeating the sequence. They have no control over the direction of locomotion and drift with the currents and tides.[3]

Genera

  • Acromitoides
  • Acromitoides purpurus (Mayer, 1910)
  • Acromitoides stiphropterus (Schultze, 1897)
  • Acromitus
  • Acromitus flagellatus (Haeckel)
  • Acromitus maculosus Light, 1914
  • Catostylus cruciatus (Lesson, 1830)
  • Catostylus mosaicus (Quoy & Gaimard, 1824)
  • Catostylus ornatellus (Vanhöffen, 1888)
  • Catostylus ouwensi Moestafa & McConnaughey, 1966
  • Catostylus perezi Ranson, 1945
  • Catostylus tagi (Haeckel, 1869)
  • Catostylus townsendi Mayer, 1915
  • Catostylus tripterus (Haeckel, 1880)
  • Catostylus turgescens (Schulze, 1911)
  • Catostylus viridescens (Chun, 1896)
  • Crambione
  • Crambione bartschi (Mayer, 1910)
  • Crambione mastigophora Maas, 1903
  • Crambionella
  • Crambionella helmbiru Nishikawa, Mulyadi & Ohtsuka, 2014
  • Crambionella orsini (Vanhöffen)
  • Crambionella stuhlmanni (Chun, 1896)
  • Leptobrachia
  • Leptobrachia leptopus (Chamisso & Eysenhardt, 1821)

See also

References

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