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Sea jelly, cephea cephea, Shark Bay. Marine biodiversity – hard and soft tropical corals. 30 Western Fisheries JANUARY 2008 WF Feature Cnidarians: Diverse and spectacular All species in the Cnidaria phyla possess stinging mechanisms, though some are to be feared much more than others. Thanks to Loisette Marsh of the WA Museum for this authoritative article on cnidarians, complementing our lift-out poster (centre spread). Photos: Clay Bryce. C nidarians include all simple animals with a cup-shaped body, the wall of which has two layers separated by a thin (in hydroids) or thick (in sea jellies) jelly layer called the ‘mesogloea’. All body processes take place in a single body cavity opening at the top that is surrounded by tentacles. This opening takes in food and expels wastes and reproductive products. Cnidarians have no brain and only a simple network of nerves over the body; however some box jellies have complex eyes, with a lens and retina, and are able to detect obstacles and avoid them. The term ‘Cnidaria’ refers to the cnidome or stinging mechanism these marine animals all possess. The stinging mechanism consists of a capsule (nematocyst) containing a coiled thread that explosively shoots out when the trigger is touched and injects venom or simply entangles its prey. Each microscopic nematocyst lies within a cell, but groups of them are often visible as beads or rings on the tentacles; there may be 1,500 nematocysts to the square millimetre on a tentacle of the deadly box jellyfish Chironex fleckeri. Cnidarians have two distinct body forms: polyps and medusa. One or other of these body forms is dominant in each of the four classes, Hydrozoa (hydroids and bluebottles); Anthozoa (anemones, hard corals, soft corals, gorgonians, black corals and sea pens); Scyphozoa (saucer jellies); and Cubozoa (box jellies). Hydrozoans – the simplest cnidarians Hydrozoans are the most basic cnidarians and usually have both polyp and medusa stages. Small feathery hydroids attach to algae, seagrasses or hard surfaces. Some have polyps enclosed in minute horny cups, while others have unprotected polyps. With a hand lens one can see a few abnormal-looking polyps in which the cup or ‘theca’ encloses an elongate structure which develops tiny medusae. These float off and mature in the plankton, developing reproductive organs that release eggs or sperm into the water column. The resulting larvae settle to the bottom, where each develops into a polyp that buds off more polyps, growing into a plant-like frond – thus completing an alternation of a vegetative polyp stage with a sexually reproductive medusa stage. There are more complex hydrozoans such as the pelagic by-the-wind sailor (Velella) which has a triangular sail borne on an oval chitinous disc, and Porpita which has a chambered circular disc. Both have feeding tentacles around the margin and reproductive structures around a central mouth under the float. Even more complex are the Siphonophores, which include the bluebottle. Bluebottles consist of a colony of polyps and medusae. One secretes the gas-filled float above the water surface while others form the long feeding tentacle, packed with stinging cells and other shorter tentacles. Just under the float are feeding and reproductive polyps. In Western Australia, bluebottles, Vellelas and Porpitas are often washed ashore by winter storms. Some hydrozoans, the hydrocorals, secrete a calcareous skeleton which is delicately branched in the pink or white Stylaster, sometimes found on Rottnest reefs, or yellow-brown in the massive or coarsely branched fire corals (Millepora). Hydrocorals have minute pores for feeding polyps surrounded by even smaller pores for polyps specialised for stinging. Medusae are directly budded off from tiny cups on the surface. Millepora can give a painful sting but is not dangerous. Saucers and boxes The Scyphozoa (saucer jellies) and Cubozoa (box jellies) have the medusa stage predominating and a very tiny, inconspicuous polyp stage resulting from sexual reproduction. In saucer jellies, the polyp buds off saucer-like discs – each of which becomes a medusa. With box jellies, Western Fisheries JANUARY 2008 31 the polyp may bud a few other polyps but each polyp gives rise to only one medusa. Carybdea box jelly, Cockburn Sound. Inset: Sting from Carybdea, Rottnest Island. Two saucer jellies commonly seen in the Swan River estuary are the white-coloured Aurelia aurita, which has a fringe of short tentacles around the margin; and the large brown sea jelly with white spots, Phyllorhiza punctata, which has much divided mouth arms ending in filaments but no marginal tentacles. The brown colour of this saucer jelly is due to the presence in the tissues of zooxanthellae (microscopic single-celled algae), which provide carbohydrates to the jelly and give off oxygen by photosynthesis. The sting from these jellies is negligible, but beware of saucer jellies with long marginal tentacles, as these can sting very painfully. The deadliest of all The Cubozoa contains the deadliest animal of all, the large box jelly Chironex fleckeri, the sting from which can kill in a few minutes. C. fleckeri has very long, flat tentacles and can have a bell as big as a man’s head. A few stings in the Broome area have been attributed to this species as they resulted in permanent scarring from the burn-like weals. Several other species of cubozoans with severe stings are found along the north-west and Kimberley coasts. The Stinging hydroid, Ashmore Reef, Kimberley WA. 32 Western Fisheries JANUARY 2008 smallest, but possibly most dangerous of these is Malo maxima, a recently described species. M. maxima produces a severe suite of symptoms known as the Irukandji syndrome, in which there is a delayed onset of pain, then severe pain, dangerously high blood pressure and respiratory distress caused by fluid on the lungs. The symptoms are life threatening but can be readily treated in hospital. Another Irukandji stinger, found off 80 Mile Beach, is Carukia shinju which has severe but not life-threatening symptoms similar to those of the original Irukandji stinger Carukia barnesi, found in north Queensland. There is still much to learn about all the sea jellies off north-western Australia and new species to be described. Swimmers may be familiar with the small box jelly, Carybdea xaymacana, which is about three centimetres high with tentacles about 20 centimetres long. This species is similar in appearance to Malo maxima, but is common off sandy beaches at Busselton and in the metropolitan area and at Rottnest Island. It has a mild to moderate sting, best treated by dousing with vinegar to de-activate the nematocysts, then by immersing the stung area in water as hot as can be borne (without scalding). If hot water is not available apply ice packs. This treatment applies to all box jelly stings. Vibrant and varied The Anthozoa are some of the most conspicuous, colourful and familiar cnidarians (such as sea anemones, hard corals, soft corals and sea fans), but there are many other groups of less wellknown anthozoans. Over 1,000 species of anthozoans have been recorded from Australia including over 200 species of reef corals. Anthozoans have their body cavity divided by partitions or septa on which the reproductive organs are borne. Eggs and sperm are released through the mouth either separately or in egg/sperm bundles in some reef corals. There is no medusa stage so the fertilised egg develops into an oval swimming larva, which attaches to something hard (even a floating thong) and develops into a polyp – which in hard corals secretes a calcareous cup around itself, buds and branches to form a colony. Anthozoans are divided into eight orders. One of these is Actiniaria (anemones) with about 200 species in southern Australia and more in tropical waters. Most attach to rock and are found from intertidal and shallow water habitats to deep water. All can move around on a muscular base. Corallimorpharia (jewel anemones) are more closely related to corals than anemones. They characteristically have a knob at the tip of their tentacles and are found in southern Australia, west to King George Sound. Zoanthidea (zoanthids) have usually finger-thick or smaller polyps joined at the base or in some species completely fused together. Most are tropical species but some are found as far south as Margaret River on limestone platforms. Ceriantharia (tube anemones) are encased in a tough fibrous tube, 20 centimetres or more long, buried in muddy sand. They have a double crown of long, tapering tentacles that in some are mauve and white and look like a field of flowers. Physalia physalis, or Portugese Man o’war Another order, Antipatharia, contains the black or thorny corals. These take the form of whips, bushes or even trees. The skeleton is made of a very hard, horny material which, cut in sections and highly polished, makes beautiful jewellery. The Scleractinia or hard corals – which include reef corals with zooxanthellae and small cave corals without zooxanthellae – have tentacles in multiples of six, while the order Alcyonacea (soft corals and gorgonians) have eight feathery tentacles to each polyp as do the Pennatulacea or sea pens. Zooanthids on yellow sponge, Abrolhos Islands. Western Fisheries JANUARY 2008 33 Coral Bleaching Reef corals, some anemones and reef top soft corals have their growth enhanced by single-celled dinoflagellates (zooxanthellae) in their tissues, which carry out photosynthesis within the coral tissues and pass the carbon compounds to the host coral. They also give a brown or greenish colour to the corals and soft corals, masking the natural colour, which is visible when zooxanthellae are absent. This coral bleaching occurs when corals are stressed by heat, cold or heavy rain on a reef at low tide. Without zooxanthellae, the white coral skeleton is visible through the transparent soft tissue. Bleached soft corals may be palest yellow. Corals can recover if the stress only lasts a few days; otherwise they die. Reef corals are limited in depth, depending on the clarity of water needed for light penetration. At 30 metres the number of species is much reduced, but a few species can be found at 50 metres. Corals that live in dim light in caves or in deep water lack zooxanthellae. Many are solitary or form small colonies, and some are adapted for living in sand with spiny props to support them. Alcyonacea are also known as ‘octocorals’ because of their eight feathery tentacles. Anemone cluster, Shark Bay 34 Western Fisheries JANUARY 2008 This order includes the soft corals, whose soft body is supported by internal water pressure and calcareous spicules, and the gorgonians or sea fans, which have the spicules fused into a calcareous skeleton or in some a skeleton of flexible, horny material. Sea pen, Fremantle While reef top soft corals are leathery and of subdued colours, the soft corals and sea fans of the deeper coral slopes come in a dazzling array of colours and forms and are host to a multitude of feather stars, brittle stars, molluscs, fish and crabs, many so well camouflaged that it takes a keen eye to find them. Like sponges, some soft corals have chemical defences against predators and these are being investigated for possible medicinal use. The order Pennatulacea (sea pens) are highly specialised octocorals that are adapted to life in soft sediments. The name sea pen refers to its resemblance to a quill pen. They are composed of a below ground muscular ‘peduncle’ that anchors the colony and an above ground part bearing polyps – with a calcareous rod supporting the whole colony. Several species are found in Cockburn Sound and even at the mouth of Fremantle Harbour. One sea pen with leaf-like branches is sometimes washed up on local beaches after winter storms and puzzles people with its strange structure. Many sea pens luminescence brightly when touched. Overall the Cnidaria are one of the most dominant, diverse and spectacular of the marine phyla. g