Mnemiopsis leidyi

Mnemiopsis leidyi

Taxobox
name = Warty comb jelly


image_caption = "M. leidyi" at the New England Aquarium
image_width = 240px
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Ctenophora
classis = Tentaculata
ordo = Lobata
familia = Mnemiidae
genus = "Mnemiopsis"
genus_authority = Agassiz, 1860
species = "M. leidyi"
binomial = "Mnemiopsis leidyi"
binomial_authority = A. Agassiz, 1865
synonyms ="Mnemiopsis gardeni" Agassiz, 1860Verify source|date=October 2007
"Mnemiopsis mccradyi" MayerVerify source|date=October 2007

The warty comb jelly or sea walnut ("Mnemiopsis leidyi") is a species of tentaculate ctenophore (comb "jellyfish" [These look similar to jellyfish but are actually quite different animals.] ), originally native to the western Atlantic coastal waters.

Three species have been named in the genus "Mnemiopsis", but they are now believed to be different ecological forms of a single species "M. leidyi" by most zoologists. [Hansson (2006)]

Description and ecology

"Mnemiopsis" have a lobed body that is oval-shaped and transparent, with four rows of ciliated combs that run along the body vertically and glow blue-green when disturbed. They have several feeding tentacles. Unlike cnidarians, "Mnemiopsis" doesn't sting. Their body contains 97% water. They are small animals, having a maximum body length of roughly 7-12 cm (3-5 inches) and a diameter of 2.5 cm (1 in).

It is euryoecious, tolerating a wide range of salinity (2 to 38 psu), temperature (2 to 32 °C), and water quality.

"Mnemiopsis" is a carnivore that consumes zooplankton including crustaceans [E.g. the calanoid copepod "Acartia tonsa" (Kube "et al." 2007)] , other comb jellies, and eggs and larvae of fish; it is sometimes known to eat smaller individuals of its own kind. It also has several other predators. Many are vertebrates, including species of birds and fish. Some predators include other members of gelatinous zooplankton such as "Beroe" ctenophores and various Scyphozoa (jellyfish).

This comb jelly has the capacity for self fertilization, as they are hermaphroditic. They have gonads that contain the ovary and spermatophore bunches in their gastrodermis. This animal carries 150 eggs along each meridional canal. Eggs and sperm are released into the water column where external fertilization takes place. The spawning is commences at late evening or at 1:00 or 2:00 a.m. The spawning eggs develop a thick outer layer within 1 minute after touching the seawater. As many as 10,000 eggs can be produced from large specimens in areas with good prey abundance. Egg production can start when the animals reach about 15 mm in length. Egg production increases with ctenophore size, and it is unclear when senescence occurs.

As an invasive species

1980s: Black Sea
It was introduced in the Black Sea in the 1980s, where only one species of comb jelly, the small sea gooseberry "Pleurobrachia pileus" occurred until then. Perhaps the introduction was deliberate to deal with rampant proliferation of phytoplankton and "Aurelia aurita" jellyfish medusae which were a consequence of the eutrophication caused by human pollutionFact|date=October 2007; possibly accidentally by merchant ships' ballast water. The first Black Sea record was in 1982. [Zaika & Sergeyeva (1990) ]

By 1989, the Black Sea population had reached the highest level, with some 400 specimens per m³ of water (>10 animals/cubic foot) in optimal conditionsKube "et al." (2007)] . Afterwards, due to depletion of foodstocks resulting in lower carrying capacity, the population dropped somewhat.

In the Black Sea, "M. leidyi" eats eggs and larvae of pelagic fish. It caused a dramatic drop in fish populations, notably the commercially important anchovy "Engraulis encrasicholus" (known locally as "hamsi, hamsiya, hamsa", etc), by competing for the same food sources and eating the young and eggs. Biological control was tried with "Beroe ovata", another comb jelly, with some degree of success; it appears as if a fairly stable predator-prey dynamic has been reached. [Kideys (2002)]

1999: Caspian Sea
In 1999 the species was introduced in the Caspian Sea. The result was that 75% of the zooplankton was depleted, thereby affecting the entire food chain of the lake.

2006: North and Baltic Seas
Since then, the species has apparently spread throughout the Mediterranean basin and the northwestern Atlantic. In 2006, it was first recorded in the North Sea [Faasse and Bayha (2006)] , and since October 17, 2006 [Javidpour "et al." (2006)] in the western Baltic Sea, namely the Kiel Fjord and The Belts. Up to 100 animals/m³ (c.3/cubic ft) were counted in the Baltic, whereas the population density in the North Sea was at a much lower 4 animals/m³ (about 1 animal/9 cubic ft) at most.

One year later, the Baltic population of "M. leidyi" was found to have spread east to the Gotland Basin and the Bay of Puck [ [http://de.news.yahoo.com/ddp/20071026/tsc-invasion-der-rippenquallen-e24321a_2.html Invasion der Rippenquallen] [in German] . Yahoo! News via "ddp", 2007-OCT-26. Retrieved 2007-OCT-28.] at least, probablyVerify source|date=March 2008 . The impact of the species on the already heavily stressed Baltic ecosystem is unknown. The species overwinters in the deep waters where temperature does not drop below 4°C; the fact that the Baltic is heavily stratified, with the waters above and below the halocline mixing quite little, is believed to aid its survival.

Apart from the widespread "P. pileus", 3 comb jelly species are occasionally drifted into the Baltic from the North Sea but do not seem to be present as a stable population of significant size: "Bolinopsis infundibulum", "Beroe cucumis" and "Beroe gracilis". The second species might potentially be used for biological control. [Hansson (2006), Kube "et al." (2007)]

The route of dispersal of "M. leidyi" to the North Sea/Baltic region is unknown. It might have occurred naturally by drifting individuals, or with ballast water of ships, either from its natural range or from the Black Sea, via the Mediterranean and eastern Atlantic [Oliveira (2007)] . At least technically possible given the species' euryhaline habits is an alternate route of dispersal through continental Europe, being carried with ballast water in ships travelling from the Black Sea to the Rhine Estuary via the Rhine-Main-Danube Canal. The latter route is known to be the point of entry into continental Europe for numerous invasive freshwater neozoons from the Ponto-Caspian region, such as the zebra mussel, the quagga mussel, the amphipods "Dikerogammarus villosus" and "Chelicorophium curvispinum", and the polychaete "Hypania invalida".

Footnotes

References

* (1961): "The Illustrated Encyclopedia of Animal Life" 13: 1671. Odham Books.
* (2006): Ctenophores of the Baltic and adjacent Seas - the invader "Mnemiopsis" is here! "Aquatic Invasions" 1(4): 295-298. [http://aquaticinvasions.ru/2006/AI_2006_1_4_Hansson.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2006): First record of "Mnemiopsis leidyi" A. Agassiz 1865 in the Baltic Sea. "Aquatic Invasions" 1(4): 299-302. [http://aquaticinvasions.ru/2006/AI_2006_1_4_Javidpour_etal.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2006): The ctenophore "Mnemiopsis leidyi" A. Agassiz 1865 in coastal waters of the Netherlands: an unrecognized invasion?. "Aquatic Invasions" 1(4): 270-277. [http://www.aquaticinvasions.ru/2006/AI_2006_1_4_Faasse_Bayha.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2002): Fall and Rise of the Black Sea Ecosystem. "Science" 297(5586): 1482-1484. doi|10.1126/science.1073002 (HTML abstract)
* (2007): "Mnemiopsis leidyi" in the Baltic Sea - distribution and overwintering between autumn 2006 and spring 2007. "Aquatic Invasions" 2(2): 137-145. [http://aquaticinvasions.ru/2007/AI_2007_2_2_Kube_etal.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2007): The presence of the ctenophore "Mnemiopsis leidyi" in the Oslofjorden and considerations on the initial invasion pathways to the North and Baltic Seas. "Aquatic Invasions" 2(3): 185-189. [http://www.aquaticinvasions.ru/2007/AI_2007_2_3_Oliveira.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (2001): The ctenophore "Mnemiopsis" in native and exotic habitats: US estuaries versus the Black Sea basin. "Hydrobiologica" 451: 145-176. doi|10.1023/A:1011826618539 [http://www.issg.org/database/species/reference_files/mnelei/Purcell%20et%20al.pdf PDF fulltext]
* (1990): Morphology and Development of "Mnemiopsis mccradyi" (Ctenophora, Lobata) in the Black Sea. "Zoologicheskiy Zhurnal" 69(2): 5-11 [Russian version] ; "Hydrobiological Journal" 26: 1-6 [English version] . [http://www.ibss.iuf.net/blacksea/species/freelife/ctenophora/mnemmcc.html HTML abstract]

External links

* [http://www.ecology.ugent.be/limno/ Research group Limnology] at Ghent University, Belgium
* [http://www.usp.br/cbm/artigos/ctenophora/index.htm Ctenophores from the São Sebastião Channel]


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