Critter of the Week: the solitary cup coral - Stephanocyathus spiniger

This stunning creature is a solitary stony cup coral species, Stephanocyathus spiniger (Marenzeller, 1888).

This stunning creature is a solitary stony cup coral species, Stephanocyathus spiniger (Marenzeller, 1888), which can be found in northern New Zealand waters and around the Indo-west Pacific from 157-590 m deep with a few outlying records of this species from deeper than 1000 m.

The specimen photographed came from the Bay of Islands, but NIWA also has records in its invertebrate collection database from near the Kermadec Islands and Norfolk Ridge.

This species is distinctive amongst other New Zealand species of solitary cup coral because of its elongated ‘costal spines’ that help keep the cup coral up off the seafloor and anchor it into a soft substrate (Cairns, 1995).

Peter Marriott, NIWA, Oceans Survey 20/20 Bay of Islands
Stephanocyathus spiniger (Marenzeller, 1888) collected from 207 m in the Bay of Islands, New Zealand.
Peter Marriott, NIWA, Oceans Survey 20/20 Bay of Islands
An array of Stephanocyathus spiniger specimens from 207 m deep in the Bay of Islands.

Cup corals are cnidarians so have stinging tentacles that help them to catch their prey. This close up photograph of the coral shows the numerous tentacles that deliver prey to its mouth and into the gastrovascular cavity. Unlike their shallow water relatives, these deep sea cup corals are azooxanthellate, meaning that they don’t have any symbiotic algae (zooxanthellae) so they have to capture all of their food from passing zooplankton to stay alive.

Peter Marriott, NIWA, Oceans Survey 20/20 Bay of Islands
Just like an anemone the cup coral Stephanocyathus spiniger (Marenzeller, 1888) has lots of tentacles to capture prey and deliver it to its mouth.

The morphology of the skeleton of the cup coral is what allows taxonomists to determine what species they are. World experts Stephen Cairns from the Smithsonian Institution and Marcelo Kitihara from the University of São Paulo in Brasil have provided an illustrated key to the recent genera and species of the deepsea azooxanthellate Scleractinia:

Illustrated key - azooxanthellate Scleractinia

Reference:

Cairns, S.D., 1995. The marine fauna of New Zealand: Scleractinia (Cnidaria: Anthozoa). New Zealand Oceanographic Institute Memoir, 103: 210 pp.