Anzeige
Fauna Marin GmbH aquarioom.com Fauna Marin GmbH Tropic Marin Professionell Lab Meerwasser24.de

Pleurobrachia pileus Sea Gooseberry

Pleurobrachia pileusis commonly referred to as Sea Gooseberry. Difficulty in the aquarium: Not suitable for aquarium keeping. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.


Profilbild Urheber Muelly

Pleurobrachia pileus, Nordsee 2015, Copyright Muelly




Uploaded by Muelly.

Image detail


Profile

lexID:
2974 
AphiaID:
106386 
Scientific:
Pleurobrachia pileus 
German:
Kamm- oder Rippenqualle; Seestachelbeere 
English:
Sea Gooseberry 
Category:
Ctenophora 
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Ctenophora (Phylum) > Tentaculata (Class) > Cydippida (Order) > Pleurobrachiidae (Family) > Pleurobrachia (Genus) > pileus (Species) 
Initial determination:
(O. F. Müller, ), 1776 
Occurrence:
the Baltic Sea, the North Sea, Arabian Sea, Australia, Central Atlantic, Central Pazific, Coral sea (Eastern Australia), European Coasts, Indian Ocean, Indo Pacific, North Atlantic Ocean, Oceania, Red Sea, South-Pazific, the Caribbean, the Mediterranean Sea, West-Atlantic Ocean, Western Pacific Ocean 
Sea depth:
Meter 
Size:
up to 0.79" (2 cm) 
Temperature:
41 °F - 82.4 °F (5°C - 28°C) 
Food:
Carnivore 
Difficulty:
Not suitable for aquarium keeping 
Offspring:
None 
Toxicity:
Toxic hazard unknown 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Red List:
Not evaluated (NE) 
Related species at
Catalog of Life:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2021-06-12 20:18:43 

Info

Pleurobrachia pileus (O. F. Müller, 1776)

Pleurobrachia pileus is a small, oval to spherical comb jelly, up to 1-2.5 cm high with two long fishing tentacles. The fishing tentacles are up to 15-20 times the length of the body (up to 50 cm long), bear lateral filaments, and can be completely retracted into the body. It swims with eight longitudinal combs, arranged in four paired rows, that give the comb jellies (ctenophores) their characteristic shimmering appearance. These combs consist of plates of transverse rows of hairs that beat in waves downwards, which produces the shimmering effect. These plates are phosphorescent at night. The gut may bear some colour. Newly hatched specimens are pear-shaped and bear only short rows of combs.

Pleurobrachia pileus is transparent ovoid to spherical body 1-2.5 cm high. Radially symmetrical with secondary bilateral symmetry. She has eight longitudinal rows of combs, arranged in four paired rows and two fishing tentacles up to 50 cm long. Lateral filaments of fishing tentacles similar.

Pleurobrachia pileus is a carnivore, preying on zooplankton, especially copepods.

Synonymised names:
Beroe hexagona (Modeer, 1790)
Beroe pileus O. F. Müller, 1776
Callianira hexagona Slabber, 1778
Callianira hexagona (Modeer, 1790)
Callianira slabberi De Haan, 1827
Callianira triploptera Lamarck, 1816
Cydippe pileus Müll. Mörch.
Pleurobrachia rhododactyla L. Agassiz, 1860

Scientific paper

  1. Patterns of comb row development in young and adult stages of the ctenophores Mnemiopsis leidyi and Pleurobrachia pileus, Sidney L. Tamm, 2012
  2. Bioenergetics and growth in the ctenophorePleurobrachia pileus, Lene Friis Møller; Javiera Martinez Canon; Peter Tiselius, 2010
  3. Does the nutrient stoichiometry of primary producers affect the secondary consumerPleurobrachia pileus?, Katherina L. Schoo; Nicole Aberle; Arne M. Malzahn; Maarten Boersma, 2010
  4. T-box and homeobox genes from the ctenophore Pleurobrachia pileus: Comparison of Brachyury, Tbx2/3 and Tlx in basal metazoans and bilaterians, Cosimo Martinelli; Jürg Spring, 2005
  5. Effects of temperature and the presence of benthic predators on the vertical distribution of the ctenophorePleurobrachia pileus, M. Esser; W. Greve; M. Boersma, 2004
  6. Distribution and abundance of ctenophores, and their zooplankton food in the Black Sea. I. Pleurobrachia pileus, E. Mutlu; F. Bingel, 1999
  7. Distribution of the new invader Mnemiopsis sp. and the resident Aurelia aurita and Pleurobrachia pileus populations in the Black Sea in the years 1991-1993, Mutlu, E, 1994
  8. The effects and implications of container volume on clearance rates of the ambush entangling predator Pleurobrachia pileus (Ctenophora: Tentaculata), M.J. Gibbons; S.J. Painting, 1992
  9. Behaviour of Pleurobrachia pileus to changes in hydrostatic pressure and the possible location of baroreceptors, Singarajah, K.V., 1991
  10. The physiology of feeding in the ctenophorePleurobrachia pileus, Anthony G. Moss, 1991
  11. Effect of ctenophore predation on mesozooplankton during a spring outburst of Pleurobrachia pileus, Bouwe R. Kuipers; Ursula Gaedke; Lisette Enserink; Harry Witte, 1990
  12. Ecological Significance of the Ctenophore Pleurobrachia pileus off Southwestern Nova Scotia, Frank, Kenneth T., 1986
  13. Distributional patterns of the ctenophores Pleurobrachia pileus and Beroe cucumis in the Bay of Fundy region, Canada, Milne, W. R.; Corey, S. , 1986
  14. The Feeding of Pleurobrachia pileus Müller (Ctenophora) from Galway Bay, Shuet Yee Yip, 1984
  15. Parasites of Pleurobrachia pileus Müller, 1776 (Ctenophora), from Galway Bay, western Ireland, Yip, Shuet Yee, 1984
  16. Investigations of the Plankton of the West Coast of Ireland: VII. A Preliminary Study of Planktonic Ctenophores along the West Coast of Ireland, with Special Reference to Pleurobrachia pileus Müller, 1776, from Galway Bay, Shuet Yee Yip, 1981
  17. Elektronenmikroskopische Untersuchung der Colloblasten-Entwicklung bei der CtenophorePleurobrachia pileus(Tentaculifera, Cydippea), Gertrud Benwitz, 1978
  18. Zur Entwicklung der Kolloblasten vonPleurobrachia pileus(Ctenophora), V. Storch; K. Lehnert-Moritz, 1974
  19. Behavior of the Planktonic Coelenterates, Sarsia tubulosa , Phialidium gregarium , and Pleurobrachia pileus in Salinity Discontinuity Layers, Arai, Mary Needler, 1973
  20. Über das Apikalorgan (Statocyste) der CtenophorePleurobrachia pileus, Brigitte Krisch, 1973
  21. Ökologische Untersuchungen anPleurobrachia pileus, W. Greve, 1972
  22. Ökologische Untersuchungen anPleurobrachia pileus, W. Greve, 1971
  23. Über Tentakel und Colloblasten der CtenophorePleurobrachia pileus, W. Bargmann; K. Jacob; A. Rast, 1971
  24. The Ecology of the Ctenophore Pleurobrachia Pileus in Scottish Waters, Fraser, J. H., 1970
  25. Ciliary Action in the Internal Cavities of the Ctenophore Pleurobrachia pileus Fabr, James F. Gemmill, 1918

Pictures

Commonly

Pleurobrachia pileus, Nordsee 2015, Copyright Muelly
1
Pleurobrachia pileus, Nordsee 2015, Copyright Muelly
1
© Anne Frijsinger & Mat Vestjens, Holland, Bild aus Holland
1
© Anne Frijsinger & Mat Vestjens, Holland, Bild aus Norwegen
1

Husbandry know-how of owners

0 husbandary tips from our users available
Show all and discuss