Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)

Scyphozoans of the genus Cassiopea are notable for their unusual benthic habit of lying upside-down with their exumbrella resting on the substrate and oral arms facing upwards resulting in their common name “upside-down jellyfish”. Cassiopea includes species that have been historically confused beca...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Claire E. Rowe, Shane T. Ahyong, Will F. Figueira, Ingo Burghardt, Stephen J. Keable
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PeerJ Inc. 2025-07-01
Series:PeerJ
Subjects:
Online Access:https://peerj.com/articles/19669.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1849470491270578176
author Claire E. Rowe
Shane T. Ahyong
Will F. Figueira
Ingo Burghardt
Stephen J. Keable
author_facet Claire E. Rowe
Shane T. Ahyong
Will F. Figueira
Ingo Burghardt
Stephen J. Keable
author_sort Claire E. Rowe
collection DOAJ
description Scyphozoans of the genus Cassiopea are notable for their unusual benthic habit of lying upside-down with their exumbrella resting on the substrate and oral arms facing upwards resulting in their common name “upside-down jellyfish”. Cassiopea includes species that have been historically confused because of taxonomic ambiguity. Additionally, some species are considered to be invasive, which can have significant economic and environmental consequences by impacting fisheries, tourism, and trophic structures. In temperate southeastern Australia, Cassiopea medusae were first reported in temperate Wallis Lake and Lake Illawarra in 2016, and then Lake Macquarie in 2017, though historically these jellyfish have a more northern tropical distribution in Queensland, eastern Australia. Owing to the invasive potential of Cassiopea, correct species identification is crucial for future management. To address this knowledge gap, this study used genetic comparison through the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) barcoding gene and morphometric analysis, together with revision of type and topotype material of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010, an incompletely known nominal species from Queensland, to investigate the identity of Cassiopea occurring in Lake Macquarie. The morphometric analysis was also used to identify key features that distinguish the Lake Macquarie species from a second species, designated Cassiopea sp.3, that is also expanding its range southwards in eastern Australia, and which may be sympatric in some areas. The results of this study show the species occurring in Lake Macquarie is Cassiopea xamachana Bigelow, 1892, originally described from Jamaica and subsequently widely reported from the Western Atlantic and the Indo-West Pacific. Additionally, we demonstrate that Cassiopea maremetens, is a junior synonym of C. xamachana. Morphological characters that can be most readily used to distinguish mature specimens of C. xamachana from C. sp.3, which has an overlapping distribution on the Australian east coast, are: (1) the number of large appendages on the oral disc, which is much higher in Cassiopea sp.3 (at least 1 but up to 14) vs. a maximum of two in C. xamachana; (2) the oral arm branching pattern, which is usually alternating for C. xamachana, but a combination of alternating, bifurcating and pinnate for Cassiopea sp.3; (3) the length of the large appendage on the oral arm, which is proportionally longer relative to the bell diameter in C. xamachana.
format Article
id doaj-art-59f66443cfec4b34b06177ecbff7b3a9
institution Kabale University
issn 2167-8359
language English
publishDate 2025-07-01
publisher PeerJ Inc.
record_format Article
series PeerJ
spelling doaj-art-59f66443cfec4b34b06177ecbff7b3a92025-08-20T03:25:08ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592025-07-0113e1966910.7717/peerj.19669Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)Claire E. Rowe0Shane T. Ahyong1Will F. Figueira2Ingo Burghardt3Stephen J. Keable4Australian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, Darlinghurst, New South Wales, AustraliaAustralian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, Darlinghurst, New South Wales, AustraliaSchool of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, AustraliaAustralian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, Darlinghurst, New South Wales, AustraliaAustralian Museum Research Institute, Australian Museum, Darlinghurst, New South Wales, AustraliaScyphozoans of the genus Cassiopea are notable for their unusual benthic habit of lying upside-down with their exumbrella resting on the substrate and oral arms facing upwards resulting in their common name “upside-down jellyfish”. Cassiopea includes species that have been historically confused because of taxonomic ambiguity. Additionally, some species are considered to be invasive, which can have significant economic and environmental consequences by impacting fisheries, tourism, and trophic structures. In temperate southeastern Australia, Cassiopea medusae were first reported in temperate Wallis Lake and Lake Illawarra in 2016, and then Lake Macquarie in 2017, though historically these jellyfish have a more northern tropical distribution in Queensland, eastern Australia. Owing to the invasive potential of Cassiopea, correct species identification is crucial for future management. To address this knowledge gap, this study used genetic comparison through the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I (COI) barcoding gene and morphometric analysis, together with revision of type and topotype material of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010, an incompletely known nominal species from Queensland, to investigate the identity of Cassiopea occurring in Lake Macquarie. The morphometric analysis was also used to identify key features that distinguish the Lake Macquarie species from a second species, designated Cassiopea sp.3, that is also expanding its range southwards in eastern Australia, and which may be sympatric in some areas. The results of this study show the species occurring in Lake Macquarie is Cassiopea xamachana Bigelow, 1892, originally described from Jamaica and subsequently widely reported from the Western Atlantic and the Indo-West Pacific. Additionally, we demonstrate that Cassiopea maremetens, is a junior synonym of C. xamachana. Morphological characters that can be most readily used to distinguish mature specimens of C. xamachana from C. sp.3, which has an overlapping distribution on the Australian east coast, are: (1) the number of large appendages on the oral disc, which is much higher in Cassiopea sp.3 (at least 1 but up to 14) vs. a maximum of two in C. xamachana; (2) the oral arm branching pattern, which is usually alternating for C. xamachana, but a combination of alternating, bifurcating and pinnate for Cassiopea sp.3; (3) the length of the large appendage on the oral arm, which is proportionally longer relative to the bell diameter in C. xamachana.https://peerj.com/articles/19669.pdfInvasiveJellyfishTaxonomy
spellingShingle Claire E. Rowe
Shane T. Ahyong
Will F. Figueira
Ingo Burghardt
Stephen J. Keable
Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)
PeerJ
Invasive
Jellyfish
Taxonomy
title Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)
title_full Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)
title_fullStr Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)
title_full_unstemmed Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)
title_short Identification of Cassiopea sp. in Lake Macquarie, Australia and revision of the taxonomic status of Cassiopea maremetens Gershwin, Zeidler & Davie, 2010 (Cnidaria: Scyphozoa: Cassiopeidae)
title_sort identification of cassiopea sp in lake macquarie australia and revision of the taxonomic status of cassiopea maremetens gershwin zeidler davie 2010 cnidaria scyphozoa cassiopeidae
topic Invasive
Jellyfish
Taxonomy
url https://peerj.com/articles/19669.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT claireerowe identificationofcassiopeaspinlakemacquarieaustraliaandrevisionofthetaxonomicstatusofcassiopeamaremetensgershwinzeidlerdavie2010cnidariascyphozoacassiopeidae
AT shanetahyong identificationofcassiopeaspinlakemacquarieaustraliaandrevisionofthetaxonomicstatusofcassiopeamaremetensgershwinzeidlerdavie2010cnidariascyphozoacassiopeidae
AT willffigueira identificationofcassiopeaspinlakemacquarieaustraliaandrevisionofthetaxonomicstatusofcassiopeamaremetensgershwinzeidlerdavie2010cnidariascyphozoacassiopeidae
AT ingoburghardt identificationofcassiopeaspinlakemacquarieaustraliaandrevisionofthetaxonomicstatusofcassiopeamaremetensgershwinzeidlerdavie2010cnidariascyphozoacassiopeidae
AT stephenjkeable identificationofcassiopeaspinlakemacquarieaustraliaandrevisionofthetaxonomicstatusofcassiopeamaremetensgershwinzeidlerdavie2010cnidariascyphozoacassiopeidae