Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Jellyella

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Family
  
Membraniporidae

Rank
  
Genus

Class
  
Gymnolaemata

Phylum
  
Bryozoa

Order
  
Cheilostomata

Jellyella httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbd

Similar
  
Cheilostomata, Membranipora, Ctenostomata, Schizoporella, Stenolaemata

Jellyella is a genus of bryozoan in the family Membraniporidae.

Contents

Etymology

The genus is named in honour of the Eliza Catherine Jelly (1829–1914), of Cornwall, England in honour of her contributions to the study of bryozoans.

Morphology

Jellyella closely resemble Membranipora, and in common with other members of the family Membraniporidae has twinned ancestrular zooids. However, Jellyella can be distinguished by the presence of intricately branched processes (called spinules) projecting into the zooidal chambers. Jellyella also have a calcitic skeletal ultrastructure made up of transversely arranged, elongate spindles.

Ecology

Jellyella is unusual in being a pseudoplanktonic bryozoan found encrusting floating objects, both natural and artificial. Jellyella eburnea is common on shells of the squid Spirula (which become detached from the soft body of the squid after death) and on the shells of the planktonic gastropod Janthina.

Jellyella tuberculata grows on the floating alga Sargassum, and on flat-bladed kelp and other seaweeds around the Cape Peninsula of South Africa. In Cape waters it is preyed upon by the crazed nudibranch, Corambe sp.

By contrast, most other bryozoans are benthic, encrusting hard substrates such as kelp or rocks.

Species

  • Jellyella eburnea (Hincks, 1891). Tropical Pacific, Atlantic, Indian Oceans.
  • Jellyella tuberculata (Bosc, 1802). Widespread, subtropical. Colloquially known as the Gulf weed bryozoan.
  • References

    Jellyella Wikipedia