Eudendrium ramosum | |
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The nudibranchFlabellina affinis feeding onEudendrium ramosum | |
Scientific classification![]() | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Cnidaria |
Class: | Hydrozoa |
Order: | Anthoathecata |
Family: | Eudendriidae |
Genus: | Eudendrium |
Species: | E. ramosum |
Binomial name | |
Eudendrium ramosum | |
Synonyms[1] | |
Eudendrium ramosum, sometimes known as thetree hydroid, is a marinespecies ofcnidaria, a hydroid (Hydrozoa) in the familyEudendriidae of the orderAnthoathecata.[1]
This is acolonial hydroid with a branching, tree-like form growing to a height of about 12 cm (5 in). The main branches divide into rather longer but narrower branches which bear single cup-shaped, feedingpolyps known ashydranths near their tips. Each hydranth has about twentytentacles but nonematophores. These hydranths are connected with the rest of the colony by hollow tubelikehydrocauli. Nearer the base of these stems are the male or female reproductive polyps, thegonophores,[1][2] with each colony being either male or female. The male sporosacs grow on unreduced hydranths, there being up to five per hydranth, each with two chambers. The female gonophores grow on slightly reduced or normal sized hydranths, each gonozoid consisting of up to seven gonophores. There may be some encapsulated embryos attached to the lower stem. The hydranths and the spadix of the male sporosacs are red while the female gonophores are more orange.[3]
Eudendrium ramosum is present in the North Atlantic Ocean, theGulf of Mexico and theMediterranean Sea. In the western Atlantic, its range extends fromGreenland and the Arctic Ocean toFlorida andTexas.[1][2] In the eastern Atlantic its range extends from the Arctic along the coasts of Europe to North Africa. It is common in the Mediterranean Sea. It has also been recorded from South Africa and Australia, however there is a very similar species,Eudendrium rameum with which it can be confused. Specimens from Arctic waters are very similar to the Mediterranean populations, but the southern hemisphere populations differ in the size and structure of the dischargedmastigophore (stinging cell) capsules.[2]
The hydroid colonies grow on a variety of hardsubstrates; they are more robust in shallow water and more lanky in deeper habitats. In the Mediterranean Sea, the colonies are present all year long with the exception of June, the breeding period being from July to February.[3]