ABSTRACT 211 - American Zoologist 38(5): 62A
Relationship Among Scleractinian Corals and their Sea Anemone Allies
Fautin D.G. and V.A. Cappola
Research on relationships among scleractinians and other anthozoans
has been impeded by lack of knowledge about soft-tissue attributes of the
skeletalized animals. We review and interpret data on scleractinian
polyps comparable to data used in taxonomic and phylogenetic analyses of
non-skeletalized anthozoans. Taxonomy of the structurally simple
sea anemones and their soft-bodied allies is based largely on histological
and anatomical attributes of the polyps. The more important characters
are those that are not altered in preservation, including distribution
and size of nematocysts, nature of musculature, and arrangement of tentacles.
Other characters of taxonomic value - including length of tentacles, body
form, and color pattern - typically differ in living and preserved specimens.
Taxonomists of scleractinian corals have accorded primary importance to
features of the skeleton. There are many such features, and they
do not change in preservation. Moreover, coral polyps, being situated
in the skeleton, can be difficult to study, and many are small. Molecular
analyses hold promise for integrated evolutionary studies of these organisms.
We present a complementary approach to investigating anthozoan phylogeny.
This research was supported by NSF grant DEB95-21819 (PEET) to DGF.
Using nucleic acid sequence data, I will assess the current taxonomic
placement of the tropical Indo-Pacific sea anemones that are host to clownfish.
The characters currently used to classify the sea anemones are morphological
(e.g. histology, cnidae, anatomy) and ecological (e.g. clownfish symbionts,
depth/geographic range, reproductive mode, habitat). The present
members of the Stichodactylidae belong to two genera, Stichodactyla
(five species) and Heteractis (four species), which can be distinguished
from one another by tentacle length and arrangement. The generic
placement of H. magnifica has been based on these two tentacle attributes,
but other characters indicate it may belong to the genus Stichodactyla.
Such characters include tentacle shape, nematocysts, and refractile endoderm,
a character shared with three species of Stichodactyla. I will use
sequence data from the cytochrome oxidase subunit III (COIII) to resolve
the generic placement of H. magnifica. The COIII sequence
data taken from each of the nine species will be used to create a phylogenetic
tree that will show the proximity of H. magnifica to the members of Stichodactyla
and Heteractis. This tree will also reveal which morphological
characters are taxonomically and phylogenetically informative.
ABSTRACT 214 - American Zoologist 38(5): 63A
Electronic Images
of Sea Anemones (Actiniaria): Preservation of Scientific Illustrations
and Specimens
McCloskey B.J., T.T. Tang and D.G. Fautin
Nearly 1500 species of sea anemones have been described
in the scientific literature. We are creating an electronic catalogue
of all anemone species. Each entry includes the bibliographic reference
to the description, the type locality, and the museum in which type
specimens are housed. Also included are illustrations from the original
description. We are also adding to this database unpublished images
obtained from microscope slides and preserved museum specimens upon which
the original description was based. The primary goal of this catalogue
is to make taxonomic research more efficient and thorough. A second
goal of this project is to preserve for posterity electronic images of
these illustrations, slides, and specimens, some of which are more than
150 years old. The publications, slides, and specimens are at risk
of deteriorating and being lost or destroyed, and need to be preserved
while still in relatively good condition. We will eventually place
these images on CD-ROM and the Internet, media that will allow them to
be available to researchers for years to come.
ABSTRACT 359 - American Zoologist 38(5): 104A
Use of Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphisms (AFLPs) to distinguish
among species of sea anemones in the genus Urticina
Hauswaldt S.
Taxonomic studies of species of sea anemones have traditionally relied on morphological characters such as color pattern, nature and shape of muscles, distribution of fertile mesenteries, and types, sizes and distribution of cnidae. Since the early 1980s molecular characters, mainly allozymes, have been employed in several studies in the field of sea anemone systematics. Nucleotide sequence data and DNA fingerprints have only been used in a few studies in this field. In search of suitable molecular markers to distinguish among four of the nominal species of Urticina and two putative congeneric species from the North American Pacific coast, I have examined DNA sequences from the mitochondrial and nuclear genome as well as AFLPs. There was not enough variation in the DNA sequences to distinguish among the species. AFLP fingerprints have provided necessary resolution among the four nominal and one of the putative species. AFLP fingerprints from the other putative species did not differ from those of U. coriacea. Results from the molecular analysis corroborated those from the morphological analysis, in which I examined types, sizes and distribution of cnidae. (Molecular study supported by a grant from the University of Kansas to D. Smith; cnidae analysis supported by NSF grant DEB95-21819 to D. Fautin)