Invasion History

First Non-native North American Tidal Record: 1955
First Non-native West Coast Tidal Record: 1955
First Non-native East/Gulf Coast Tidal Record:

General Invasion History:

Corymorpha sp. A is a small, unidentified mud-dwelling hydroid, known only from Point Richmond and Lake Merritt, Oakland, California (a lagoon of San Francisco Bay). Its introduced status is based on the fact that no similar hydroid has been reported from elsewhere on the West Coast. In Lake Merritt, it exists in a community composed primarily of introduced species (Carlton 1979; Cohen and Carlton 1995). It was reportedly similar to the Atlantic species C. nutans (Cadet Hand, personal communication, Carlton 1979), but the form illustrated by Mills et al. (in Carlton 2007, Plate 41J) is clearly different from C. nutans in size, tentacle numbers, and other features (Bouillon et al. 2004; MarLin 2004).

North American Invasion History:

Invasion History on the West Coast:

Hydroids of Corymorpha sp. A were found by M. Jones in 1955-1956 at Point Richmond in central San Francisco Bay, and by J.T. Carlton in 1967 at Lake Merritt, Oakland (Carlton 1979; Mills et al., in Carlton 2007) in shallow, soft-bottom habitats of variable salinity. We know of no other recent records of this hydrozoan.


Description

Corymorpha sp. A is a very small (~3 mm height) unidentified hydroid, known only from Point Richmond and Lake Merritt, Oakland, California (a lagoon of San Francisco Bay). Carlton (1979) describes it as ‘a tiny corymorphid hydroid with an orange tint in life’. It appears to be closest to Corymorpha nutans, a Northeast Atlantic species (Cadet Hand, personal communication, Carlton 1979). A medusa is not known for Corymorpha sp. A, but C. nutans does have a medusa stage. The genus name is tentative.

Corymorpha sp. A is illustrated by Mills et al. (in Carlton 2007, Plate 41J, but not included in the key), as a solitary polyp, with a stalk ending in a pointed base, a spindle-shaped hydranth, and six filiform (thread-like) tentacles in a single whorl below a conical hypostome. The illustration shows the base of the stem as tapered, ending in a point, with no rootlets.

Corymorpha nutans, although reportedly similar to Corymorpha sp. A (Cadet Hand, personal communication, Carlton 1979), is much larger, up to 100 mm height, with a thick cylindrical stem and about 20-80 short oral tentacles around the mouth of the hypostome, and a whorl of 20-32 longer tentacles around the base of the hypostome. Gonophores bearing medusa buds are located between the two whorls of tentacles. The base of the stem terminates in rootlets, which attach to the substrate. The hydroid is white to pale red, darkening to bright red around the mouth (Bouillon et al. 2004; MarLin 2011). This hydroid has a medusa, up to 6 mm in height, which is described in Bouillon et al. (2004).


Taxonomy

Taxonomic Tree

Kingdom:   Animalia
Phylum:   Cnidaria
Class:   Hydrozoa
Subclass:   Hydroidolina
Order:   Anthoathecatae
Suborder:   Capitata
Family:   Corymorphidae
Genus:   Corymorpha
Species:   sp. A.

Synonyms

Euphysa sp. (Jones, 1961 - cited by Carlton, 1979)

Potentially Misidentified Species

Cladonema myersi
Cladonema myersi is a small colonial hydroid, with polyps about 0.5 mm tall, and bearing 4 captitate (ending in bulbs) tentacles

Cladonema pacificum
Cladonema pacificum is a small colonial hydroid, with polyps about 0.5 mm tall, and and 4 captitate (ending in bulbs) tentacles

Corymorpha nutans
Corymorpha nutans is larger than C. sp., up to 100 mm in height, and can be mistaken for an anemone, with a thick stem. It has two whorls of tentacles, 20-80 short oral tentacles, and 20-30 longer tentacles at the base of the hypostome. It is known from the East Atlantic, the Mediterranean Sea, and the Gulf of Mexico (Bouillon et al. 2004).

Ecology

General:

Corymorpha sp. A inhabits mud bottoms in ‘shallow, brackish water’ (Carlton 1979). It is not known whether C. sp. A possesses a sexually reproducing medusa, as in the other corymorphids C. nutans and Euphysora bigelowi, or reproduces sexually through attached gonophores, as in the southern California species C. palma (Bouillon et al. 2004; Mills et al., in Carlton 2007). Sexual reproduction would produce planula larvae, which seek out a suitable substrate, and metamorphose into new hydroids (Barnes 1983). These hydroids probably feed on zooplankton or small epibenthic fauna. A nudibranch, Cuthona divae, is reported to feed on 'Corymorpha sp.' (McDonald, in Carlton 2007), which could include this species.

Food:

Zooplankton

Consumers:

Cuthona divae

Trophic Status:

Carnivore

Carn

Habitats

General HabitatUnstructured BottomNone
Salinity RangeMesohaline5-18 PSU
Salinity RangePolyhaline18-30 PSU
Salinity RangeEuhaline30-40 PSU
Tidal RangeSubtidalNone
Vertical HabitatEpibenthicNone


Tolerances and Life History Parameters

Minimum Height (mm)3Hydroid height (Carlton 1979)
Broad Temperature RangeNoneWarm temperate
Broad Salinity RangeNonePolyhaline-Euhaline

General Impacts

There are no reported impacts of Corymorpha sp. A in San Francisco Bay.

Regional Distribution Map

Bioregion Region Name Year Invasion Status Population Status
NEP-V Northern California to Mid Channel Islands 1955 Non-native Established
P090 San Francisco Bay 1955 Non-native Established

Occurrence Map

OCC_ID Author Year Date Locality Status Latitude Longitude
759503 Jones 1961 1955 Point Richmond, Station A Non-native 37.9211 -122.3881
759504 Jones 1961 1955 Point Richmond, Station B Non-native 37.9114 -122.3889
759505 Jones 1961 1955 Point Richmond, Station C Non-native 37.9036 -122.3853
759506 Jones 1961 1955 Point Richmond, Station D Non-native 37.9058 -122.3850
759507 Carlton 1979 1967 Lake Merritt, Oakland, San Francisco Bay Non-native 37.8025 -122.2578

References

Barnes, Robert D. (1983) Invertebrate Zoology, Saunders, Philadelphia. Pp. 883

Bouillon, Jean; Medel, Maria Dolores; Pagès, Francesc; Gili, Josep-Maria; Boero, Ferdinando ; Gravili, Cinzia (2004) Fauna of the Mediterranean Hydrozoa., Scientia Marina 68(suppl. 2): 5-438

Carlton, James T. (1979) History, biogeography, and ecology of the introduced marine and estuarine invertebrates of the Pacific Coast of North America., Ph.D. dissertation, University of California, Davis. Pp. 1-904

Carlton, James T. (Ed.) (2007) The Light and Smith Manual: Intertidal Invertebrates from Central California to Oregon Fourth Edition, Completely Revised and Expanded, University of California Press, Berkeley. Pp. <missing location>

Cohen, Andrew N.; Carlton, James T. (1995) Nonindigenous aquatic species in a United States estuary: a case study of the biological invasions of the San Francisco Bay and Delta, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and National Sea Grant College Program (Connecticut Sea Grant), Washington DC, Silver Spring MD.. Pp. <missing location>

MarLin- Marine Life Information Network 2006-2024 MarLin- Marine Life Information Network. <missing URL>



Mills, Claudia; Marques, Antonio; Migotto, Alvaro E; Calder, Dale R.; Hand, Cadet (2007) The Light and Smith Manual: Intertidal invertebrates from Central California to Oregon (4th edition), University of California Press, Berkeley CA. Pp. 118-168