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New order of marine creatures discovered among sea anemones
Date:
May 7, 2014
Source:
American Museum of Natural History
Summary:
A deep-water creature once thought to be one of the
world's largest sea anemones, with tentacles reaching more than 6.5 feet long,
actually belongs to a new order of animals. The finding is part of a new
DNA-based study that presents the first tree of life for sea anemones, a group
that includes more than 1,200 species.
........................
A deep-water creature once thought to be one of the world's
largest sea anemones, with tentacles reaching more than 6.5 feet long, actually
belongs to a new order of animals. The finding is part of a new DNA-based study
led by the American Museum of Natural History that presents the first tree of
life for sea anemones, a group that includes more than 1,200 species. The
report, which is published today in the journal PLOS ONE, reshapes scientists'
understanding of the relationships among these poorly understood animals.
"The
discovery of this new order of Cnidaria -- a phylum that includes jellyfish,
corals, sea anemones, and their relatives -- is the equivalent to finding the
first member of a group like primates or rodents," said Estefanía
Rodríguez, an assistant curator in the Museum's Division of Invertebrate
Zoology and the lead author of the new publication. "The difference is
that most people are far more familiar with animals like chimpanzees and rats
than they are with life on the ocean floor. But this amazing finding tells us that
we have so much more to learn and discover in the ocean."
Rodríguez,
along with an international team of researchers, conducted a four-year study to
organize sea anemones in a "natural," or phylogenetic, way, based on
their evolutionary relationships. Sea anemones are stinging polyps that spend
most of their time attached to rocks on the sea floor or on coral reefs.
Although they vary greatly in size and color, anemones have very few defining
structures. As a result, classifying these animals based on morphology alone
can be difficult.
"Anemones
are very simple animals," Rodríguez said. "Because of this, they are
grouped together by their lack of characters -- for example, the absence of a
skeleton or the lack of colony-building, like you see in corals. So it wasn't a
huge surprise when we began to look at their molecular data and found that the
traditional classifications of anemones were wrong."
The
researchers compared particular sections of DNA of more than 112 species of
anemones collected from oceans around the world. Based on genetic data and the
organization of their internal structures, the scientists reduced the
sub-orders of anemones from four to two.
They also
discovered that one of species that they analyzed is not a sea anemone at all.
This animal, previously called Boloceroides daphneae, was discovered in
2006 in the deep east Pacific Ocean and labeled as one of the largest sea
anemones in existence. But the new study shifts it outside of the tree of life
for anemones. Instead, the researchers placed it in a newly created order -- a
classification equal to carnivoria in mammals or crocodilia in reptiles --
under the sub-class Hexacorallia, which includes stony corals, anemones, and
black corals. The new name of the animal, which lives next to hydrothermal
vents, is Relicanthus daphneae.
Relicanthus
daphneae is a
classic example of convergent evolution, the independent evolution of similar
features in species of different lineages.
"Even
though this animal looks very much like a sea anemone, it is not one,"
Rodríguez said. "Both groups of animals lack the same characters, but our
research shows that while the anemones lost those characters over millions of
years of evolution, R. daphneae never had them. Putting these animals in
the same group would be like classifying worms and snakes together because
neither have legs."
For now, Relicanthus
daphneae is the only species in the new order, but researchers hope to
change that. "Although we've long known about the existence of this giant
animal, it's only in recent years that we're really starting to understand
where it fits into the tree of life," Rodríguez said. "So imagine
what else is still out there to discover."
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials provided by American Museum of Natural History. Note:
Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Estefanía Rodríguez, Marcos S. Barbeitos, Mercer R. Brugler, Louise M. Crowley, Alejandro Grajales, Luciana Gusmão, Verena Häussermann, Abigail Reft, Marymegan Daly. Hidden among Sea Anemones: The First Comprehensive Phylogenetic Reconstruction of the Order Actiniaria (Cnidaria, Anthozoa, Hexacorallia) Reveals a Novel Group of Hexacorals. PLoS ONE, 2014; 9 (5): e96998 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0096998
Cite This
Page:
American Museum of Natural History.
"New order of marine creatures discovered among sea anemones."
ScienceDaily. ScienceDaily, 7 May 2014.
<www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2014/05/140507212257.htm>.