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Revista de Biología Tropical, ISSN: 2215-2075, Vol. 71(S3): e56470, agosto-diciembre 2023 (Publicado Set. 22, 2023)
Diversity of freshwater hydrozoans from Neotropical region:
an annotated inventory of species
María I. Deserti1* https://orcid.org/0000-0003-4809-3608
Sergio N. Stampar2 https://orcid.org/0000-0003-3075-2492
Fabián H. Acuña1,3 https://orcid.org/0000-0002-9782-1619
1. Instituto de Investigaciones Marinas y Costeras (IIMyC) CONICET; Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales,
Universidad Nacional de Mar Del Plata, Mar Del Plata, Argentina; desertiirene@gmail.com (Correspondence).
2. Laboratório de Evolução e Diversidade Aquática (LEDA), Departamento de Ciências Biológicas, Faculdade de
Ciências, Universidade Estadual Paulista, Bauru SP, Brazil; sergio.stampar@unesp.br
3. Estación Científica Coiba (Coiba-AIP), calle Gustavo Lara, Edificio 145B, Clayton, Panamá, República de Panamá;
facuna@mdp.edu.ar
Received 20-X-2022. Corrected 12-VII-2023. Accepted 17-VII-2023.
ABSTRACT
Introduction: Worldwide, six genera of the class Hydrozoa are recognized in continental waters: the cosmopoli-
tan Hydra, the colonial Cordylophora and Pachycordyle, the medusae Craspedacusta and Limnocnida and the little
polyp Calpasoma. Even though interest in cnidarians has grown in recent years, those restricted to freshwater
continue to be relegated and there is even little published information on the ubiquity of certain species. In the
Neotropical region, knowledge about its distribution is still very scarce.
Methods: We reviewed the global literature on the subject and different online database platforms, presenting
in this work a nomenclator, including discussions of the status of some species and provide the most recent
identification key.
Results: This analysis reveals that in 15 countries corresponding to the Neotropical region, the finding of fresh-
water hydrozoans has been reported. Panama, Brazil and Argentina are the countries with the highest number
of reports.
Conclusions: The heterogenity of environments where these genera have been found (from the Strait of Magellan
to Mexico) offers a clear vision of their wide distribution and great adaptability to different environments. This
study evidence the knowledge gap that still exists about the Neotropical freshwater hidrozoans and the impor-
tance of systematizing the current information about their distribution, biology and ecology, especially for those
species considered invasive.
Key words: Cnidaria; inland waters; Neotropical region; freshwater species.
RESUMEN
Diversidad de hidrozoos de agua dulce de la región Neotropical: un inventario comentado de especies
Introducción: A nivel mundial, se reconocen seis géneros de hidrozoos de agua dulce: la cosmopolita Hydra, los
pólipos coloniales Cordylophora y Pachycordyle, las medusas Craspedacusta y Limnocnida y el pequeño pólipo
Calpasoma. A pesar de que el interés por los cnidarios ha crecido en los últimos años, los grupos restringidos a
agua dulce siguen relegados, hay poca información sobre la ubicuidad de ciertas especies, o los datos no han sido
publicados oficialmente. En la región Neotropical el conocimiento de la distribución de este grupo zoológico aún
continúa siendo escaso.
https://doi.org/10.15517/rev.biol.trop..v71iS3.56470
SUPPLEMENT
2Revista de Biología Tropical, ISSN: 2215-2075 Vol. 71(S3): e56470, agosto-diciembre 2023 (Publicado Set. 22, 2023)
INTRODUCTION
Global diversity of inland waters cnidar-
ians, excepting for Endocnidozoa, is low. It is
comprised for less than 40 species from phy-
logenetically distinct groups. These organisms
live in nearly all types of freshwater environ-
ments and are distributed in all continents,
except Antarctica, but only few species are
cosmopolitan (Jankowski et al., 2008). The
freshwater species from the class Hydrozoa
fall into phylogenetically disparate groups: the
cosmopolitan Hydra sp., the simple and solitary
polyps without medusae; Cordylophorinae, the
colonial hydroids Cordylophora sp. and Pachy-
cordyle sp.; the freshwater medusae Craspeda-
custa sp. and Limnocnida sp. and the enigmatic
polyp Calpasoma sp. (Bouillon & Boero, 2000;
Collins, 2002). The genera Pachycordyle sp. and
Limnocnida sp. are not represented in the Neo-
tropical region (Dumont, 1994).
Freshwater hydrozoans in the Neotropical
region, have been known from 1858 with one
record of Cordylophora sp, from Brazil made
by Van Beneden. The works of Burger (1906),
Smith (1925) and Froehlich (1963) cited for the
first time specimens of Hydra sp., Craspedacus-
ta sp. and Calpasoma sp., respectively. However,
there is still a significative knowledge gap about
the distribution of these genera.
In this review, the specific bibliography of
Calpasoma sp., Cordylophora sp., Craspedacusta
sp. and Hydra sp. corresponding to the Neotrop-
ical region was analyzed, including the entire
South American continent, Central America,
the Antilles and Mexico. The main informa-
tion extracted was geographic distribution and
diagnostic characteristics. As a result of this
review, we present a checklists classification
following the last update of WoRMS of the
taxonomic classification, the most recent iden-
tification keys and discussions of the status of
some species.
The main objective of this review is to
identify the existing knowledge in the gen-
era of freshwater hydrozoans, analyze and
synthesize them, establishing a solid base for
future research.
The compiled information comes from
scientific literature and the online databases
GBIF (Global Biodiversity Information Facil-
ity: http://www.gbif.org), THL (The Hydra
Library: http://www.biology.pomona.edu/mar-
tinez/library.html), BHL (Biodiversity Heritage
Library: www.biodiversitylibrary.org), SNRD
(Sistema Nacional de Repositorios Digitales:
https://repositoriosdigitales.mincyt.gob.ar/
vufind/), WoRMS (World Hydrozoa Databases
belonging to World Register of Marine Species:
www.marinespecies.org/hydrozoa) (Schuchert,
2022) and observations from iNaturalist (www.
inaturalist.org).
Métodos: Analizamos la literatura mundial específica y diferentes bases de datos en línea, presentando en este
trabajo un nomenclador, las calves de identificación más recientes, incluyendo, además, discusiones sobre el
estado de algunas especies.
Resultados: Este análisis revela que al menos 15 países pertenecientes a la región Neotropical contienen reportes
de hidrozoos dulceacuícolas. Panamá, Brasil y Argentina son los países con mayor número de hallazgos.
Conclusiones: La disparidad de ambientes donde estos géneros han sido hallados (desde el Estrecho de
Magallanes hasta México) ofrece una clara visión de su amplia distribución y su gran adaptabilidad a diferentes
ambientes. Revela el vacío de información que aún existe sobre estos organismos dulceacuícolas, y la importancia
de retomar esta línea de investigación, para ampliar el conocimiento sobre su distribución, biología y ecología,
especialmente para aquellas especies consideradas invasoras.
Palabras clave: Cnidarios; aguas continentales; región Neotropical; especies de agua dulce.
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Remarks of Calpasoma dactylopterum
Fuhrmann, 1939: It has been referred in some
reviews as a tentaculate form of Craspedacusta
sp., some authors have even observed the trans-
formation of the Craspedacusta sp. polypoid
into a Calpasoma-like polyp (Holstein & Ems-
chermann, 1995). The reproductive experi-
ments developed by Spira (1964) and Matthews
(1966), led them to believe that they were dif-
ferent species. However, Jankowski (2001) con-
sidered at least one form of Calpasoma sp. to
be congeneric with Craspedacusta sp., besides
in all other studies where Craspedacusta sp.
polyps have been cultured, this conversion has
never been observed (Kuhl, 1947; Lytle, 1961;
McClary, 1959; Reisinger, 1957). This species
lives attached to plant substrates in natural or
artificial ponds. These small tentaculate polyps,
which rarely exceed a millimeter in length,
are solitary and reproduce asexually originat-
ing propangles from their tentacles (Buchert,
1960; Dioni, 1974; Matthews, 1966; Rahat &
Campbell, 1974).
The genus Calpasoma sp. has only been
found so far in three countries: Argentina,
Brazil and Uruguay (Table 1). All these obser-
vations are longstanding, the most recent dates
from 1983 from Brazil, however morphological
descriptions are quite accurate.
Remarks of Cordylophora caspia Pallas,
1771: Clonal and athecate hydroid with medusa
Classification and checklist of freshwater hydrozoans from the Neotropical region
Phylum Cnidaria Hatschek, 1888
Class Hydrozoa Owen 1843
Subclass Trachylinae Haeckel, 1879
Order Limnomedusae Kramp, 1938
Family Olindiidae Haeckel, 1879
Genus Calpasoma Fuhrmann, 1939
Calpasoma dactylopterum Fuhrmann, 1939
Genus Craspedacusta Lankester, 1880
Craspedacusta sowerbii Lankester, 1880
Subclass Hydroidolina Collins, 2000
Order Anthoathecata Cornelius, 1992
Suborder Filifera Kühn, 1913
Family Cordylophoridae von Lendenfeld, 1885
Genus Cordylophora Allman, 1844
Cordylophora caspia Pallas, 1771
Suborder Aplanulata Collins, Winkelman, Hadrys & Schierwater, 2005
Family Hydridae Dana, 1846
Genus Hydra Linnaeus, 1758
Hydra viridissima Pallas, 1766
Hydra vulgaris Pallas, 1766
Hydra magellanica Schulze, 1927
Hydra pseudoligactis Hyman, 1931
Hydra paranensis Cernosvitov, 1935
Hydra iheringi Cordero, 1939
Hydra thomseni Cordero, 1941
Hydra plagiodesmica, Dioni 1968
Hydra intermedia Carvalho-Whole, 1978
Hydra salmacidis Lang da Silveira, 1996
H. vulgaris pedunculata Deserti, Zamponi & Escalante, 2011
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stage lacking (Pennak, 1989). Reproduces sexu-
ally by new free-swimming planula larvae. It is
dioecious with gonophores containing eggs or
sperm (Folino, 2000). Colonies are polymor-
phic and grow by adding hydrants to hydro-
cauli on the upright branches and extending
the stolon or hydrorhiza (Jormalainen et al.,
1994). This organism is able to survive unfa-
vorable environmental conditions via spheres
of coenosarcs tissue, called menonts, which
regenerate when conditions are restored (Roos,
1979). This survival strategy and the ability to
adapt to a wide salinity range contribute to its
current large distribution, considered in many
regions as an invasive species (CABI Digital
Library, 2016).
There are eleven records of C. caspia from
Argentina, Chile, Uruguay and Brazil (Table 2).
According to Roch (1924) the first record of C.
caspia from Brazil was made by van Beneden
in 1858. Therefore, Silveira & Boscolo (1996)
considered it doubtful, then Haddad & Naka-
tani (1996) made the first official record 133
years later.
In Panama C. caspia was reported in dif-
ferent regions of the Panama Canal (Folino-
Rorem et al., 2009; Hildebrand, 1939; Jones &
tzler, 1975). However, none of the records
provide morphological information associated
with the specimens.
The oldest report of C. caspia, from 1925,
is in the database GBIF, it was collected by Hil-
debrand in Gatun locks of the Panama Bay and
deposited in the Smithsonian National Museum
of Natural History (NMNH) (Orrell, 2022). The
specimens officially cited in Hildebrand (1939)
correspond to samples collected ten years later,
during 1935 and 1937. Other 20 records cor-
respond to specimens collected in the lower
east chamber of Gatun locks, one from Gatun
Lake, At Air Strip NW of Gamboa, and another
ten from Panama Bay, Pedro Miguel locks. The
specimens of these 31 records are deposited
in NMNH (Orrell, 2022). These records do
not include morphological information. The
references of the seven records corresponding
to Mexico (six of them without morphological
information) and the only one from Colombia
are included in Table 2.
Remarks of Craspedacusta sowerbii
Lankester, 1880 [= Limnocodium Allman,
1880 = Mycrohydra Potts, 1885, according
to Schuchert (2022)]: Freshwater hydrozoan
commonly observed in the medusa stage. The
species blooms seasonally, having mainly a sub-
tropical to temperate distribution (Gasith et al.,
2011; Jakovčev-Todorović et al., 2010; Jankows-
ki, 2001; Jankowski et al., 2008; Karaouzas et al.,
2015). Its life cycle includes both polyp (assum-
ing asexual reproduction) and free–swimming
stages (involved in sexual reproduction) (Gasith
et al., 2011). The free swimming-pelagic stage is
sporadic, lasting only few weeks, usually dur-
ing the late summer and autumn (Minchin et
al., 2016). The polyp stage is often overlooked
because of its small size (usually less than one
millimeter) and both stages are rarely reported
together (Failla et al., 2017).
The polyp form, previously described as
Microhydra ryderi (Potts, 1885), are cylindrical,
without tentacles. They are commonly solitary
Tabl e 1
Calpasoma dactylopterum Fhurmann, 1939 from Argentina, Uruguay and Brazil. (*) No information.
Country Region Morphological description Author
Argentina University of Buenos Aires
(vegetation from Corrientes)
Small polyps (0,4 mm in length). Hyaline tentacles.
Basitrich eurytele. Small propangles
Dioni (1974)
Uruguay Rodó Park (artificial pond)
Montevideo
Same characteristics as Argentine polyps. Dioni (1974)
Brazil University City of Sao Pablo Light grey polyps (0.5 mm in length). Hyaline tentacles.
Consider the polypoid form of Craspedacusta
Froehlich (1963)
Southeast of Sao Paulo state (*) Domaneschi &
Coneglian (1983)
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Tabl e 2
Cordylophora caspia Pallas, 1771 from Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico. (*) No information.
Country Region Morphological description Author
Argentina Río Santiago (tributary
of Río de la Plata estuary)
Slightly and whitish colony. Hydrants 11-17
mm length. 8 to 28 fine and filiform tentacles.
Hydrocauli base with rings. Abundant oval female
gonophores
Gaggero (1923)
Chascomús lake
(Rio Salado basin)
Albicola form. Slightly and yellowish hydrocauli
(0.18 mm diameter). Stenoteles and desmonemes.
Ringuelet & Olivier
(1954)
Lobos Lake (Rio Salado
basin)
Lacustris form. Dark brown hydrocauli and stolons
(0.155 mm diameter). 15-20 tentacles. Abundant
round and oval gonophores (one to eight embryos)
Ringuelet & Olivier
(1954)
Puerto Yeruá (Entre Ríos) (*) Liotta & Wagner (2003)
Nahuel Rucá lagoon
(Buenos Aires)
Albicola form. Gastrozooids 1.21 to 3.95 mm
length. Four to seven fine and filiform tentacles.
Cylindrical stolons. Hydrocauli base with rings.
Desmonemes and heterotrichous microbasic
eurytele. Menont (12.5 μm in diameter).
Deserti et al. (2015)
Uruguay Las Brujas stream, tributary
of the Santa Lucia River
(Montevideo)
Albicola form. Dark, brown and cylindrical stolons.
Fusiform gastrozooids with 15 tentacles.
Cordero (1941b)
Chile Fjord Comau (Los Lagos
region)
(*) Galea (2007)
Brazil Paraná river, Foz do Iguaçu
(Paraná)
Hydrocauli 0.3 to 2 cm length. Abundant male and
female gonophores
Haddad & Nakatani
(1996)
Estuary of Rio Ubatuba
(Sao Paulo)
Male and female colonies. Hydrocauli up to 3.5 cm
length. 9 to 16 tentacles. Elliptical gonophores.
Silveira & Boscolo
(1996)
Funil Plant, Itatiaia
(Rio de Janeiro)
Regularly branched colonies. Hydrocauli base with
rings. 16-20 tentacles. Gonophores ovate invested
in a gonangium-like extension of perisarc.
Grohmann (2008)
Reservoir Governador
José Richa (Paraná)
(*) Borges (2008) & da Silva
(2021)
Colombia Santa Marta Branched colonies. 12-16 tentacles per hydrant.
Oval gonophores
Wedler (2017)
Mexico Mandinga lagoon (Veracruz) (*) Rioja (1959)
San Juan river (Nuevo León) (*) Guajardo et al. (1987)
Mandinga Estuary (Veracruz) (*) López-Ochoterena &
Madrazo-Garibay (1989)
Gulf of Mexico, Veracruz and
Campeche
(*) Okolodkov et al. (2007)
Gulf of Mexico (*) Authors consider a nonindigenous species Calder & Cairns (2009)
Veracruz Reef System
National Protected Area (Gulf
of Mexico)
Monopodial colony. Pale pink or yellowish
hydrants. 14-27 scattered filiform tentacles.
Eurytele and desmoneme.
Jerónimo (2013)
Cayo Arenas Reef (Gulf of
Mexico)
(*) Mendoza-Becerril et al.
(2020)
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or form small colonies of two to four polyps
(Russell, 1953). As explained above, Calpasoma
sp. is usually considered to be the polypoid ten-
tacular form of Craspedacusta sp.
The species C. sowerbii develops a resting
stage under unfavorable environmental condi-
tions, an adaptation that confers it high survival
potential and enhances its dispersal capacity.
There is a consensus about its human mediated
introduction through fish and aquatic plants
and it is considered globally as an invasive spe-
cies of lakes (Dumont, 1994; Fritz et al., 2009;
Marsden & Hauser, 2009).
In South America, this genus has been
found in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Chile and
Venezuela (Table 3). Brazil and Chile, respec-
tively, contain the greatest number of records,
however nine of the 13 total citations from
Tabl e 3
Craspedacusta sowerbii Lankester, 1880 from Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Brazil, Venezuela, Mexico, Panama, Belize and Costa
Rica. (*) No information.
Country Region Morphological description Author
Argentina Lake of General San Martin Park
(Mendoza)
Female adults. 11 mm umbrellar diameter.
Mouth with four lips. Four perradial
channels. Four larger perradial tentacles.
First, second and third order tentacles.
Velum. Heterotrichous microbasic eurytele.
Oval gonads.
Ringuelet (1950)
Lake of General San Martin Park
(Mendoza)
Reexamination of material deposited by
Ringuelet (1950) in La Plata Museum
Vannucci & Tundisi
(1962)
La Florida (San Luis) and Horco
Molle reserve (Tucumán)
(*) Richard (1990)
Rio III Reservoir (Córdoba) Female specimens. Medusae 7-16 mm
diameter. Gonads with pistolera form.
Boltovskoy & Battistoni
(1981)
Valle Medio (Rio Negro) (*) Validated by GBIF Tormo (2014)
Uruguay Artigas and Durazno departments Female medusae 8-10 mm diameter and 4-5
mm high
Mañé Garzón &
Carbonell (1971)
Del Medio Lagoon (upper basin
of the Santa Lucía river) (Florida
department)
Live colony (666.5-1 152.2 μm length).
Solitary polyps (450-663 μm length).
Transparent hydroids without tentacles.
Nematocysts surrounding the hypostome
forming a spherical capitulum. Frustules
elongated and rod-like
Failla Siquier et al.
(2017)
Chile Tranque Marga-Marga
(Valparaiso)
Medusae 5-10 mm diameter. Four to seven
series of tentacles
Porter & Schmitt (1942)
Valparaiso (*) Vannucci & Tundisi
(1962)
Laguna Grande de San Pedro
(Concepción)
Adult female medusae 10.21 diameter.
Velum and manubrium. Four perradial
channels. Oval gonads. First, second and
third order tentacles. Oval and elongated
nematocysts
Quezada (1969)
Playa Tranquila, Lanalhue lake,
Contulmo (Arauco)
Medusae 8-15 mm diameter Quezada & Aurora
(1973)
Peñuelas reservoir (Valparaiso) (*) Schmid-Araya & Zúñiga
(1992)
Carilafquén lagoon (Araucania
region)
(*) Figueroa & de los Ríos
(2010)
Illahuapi lagoon, De Los Ríos
(Ranco)
Medusae 4-20 mm diameter. Four types of
tentacles. Four gonads.
Caputo Galarce et al.
(2013, 2018)
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Country Region Morphological description Author
Del Bío-Bío, De La Araucania and
De Los Ríos region
(*) Single haplotype. Fuentes (2015)
Santa Elena (Bío-Bío region) Medusae 2.3 cm length. Four visible gonads Fraire-Pacheco et al.
(2017)
Mediterranean and Valdivian
ecoregion
(*) Single, unique C. sowerbii haplotype in
both ecoregions.
Fuentes et al. (2019)
Lake Illahuapi and San Pedro
(Valdivian ecoregion)
Illahuapi medusae 1.6 and 2.2 cm2 umbrellar
area, slightly brownish gonads. San Pedro
medusae 1.4 and 3.2 cm2 umbrellar area,
whitish gonads. Two studied lakes host
clonal population
Caputo Galarce et al.
(2021)
Los Lagos region (Llanquihue) (*) Collected in 2020. Validated by GBIF iNaturalist
Brazil Porto Alegre (Rio Grande do Sul) (*) Polyps and medusae. Gliesch (1930)
Belo Horizonte (Minas Gerais) (*) Only female medusae Martins (1941)
Belo Horizonte (*) Sawaya (1957)
o Paulo (*) Polypoid form Froehlich (1963)
Minas Gerais (*) Bandeira de Mello et al.
(1971)
Curitiba (*) Loyola e Silva & Oliveira
(1988)
Serra da Mesa HPP Reservoir
(Goiás)
(*) De Filippo et al. (1999)
Lajeado UHE (*) Reis Pereira (2002)
Lagoa Misteriosa (Mato Grosso
do Sul)
Juvenile 7.8 mm diameter. Adults 25 mm
diameter
Silva & Roche (2007)
14 de Julho Plant, Cotiporã (Rio
Grande do Sul)
Medusae 5- 3 mm diameter Schwarzbold et al. (2010)
Lagoa Azul, Prados (Minas Gerais
state)
(*) Souza & Ladeira (2011)
Passo Fundo (Rio Grande do Sul) Medusae 8.1-11.5 mm diameter.
Nematocysts in groups on papillae.
Marginal cnidocyst ring. Four simple radial
channels. Hanging, pouchlike gonads on
radial channels.
Savaris et al. (2013)
São Valentim (Rio Grande do Sul) Medusae 5-15 mm diameter Restello et al. (2015)
Venezuela Lagartijo Reservoir (*) Infante & Infante (1994)
Lagartijo and Camatagua
reservoir, Aragua and Guanapito
(Guárico)
(*) Guajardo et al. (1987)
Mexico Rodrigo Gomerza reservoir
(Nuevo León)
(*) Guajardo et al. (1987)
Adolfo López Mateos reservoir,
Badiraguato (Sinaloa)
Female medusae 10-19 mm bell diameter.
iNaturalist reports C. sowerbii also for this
site. Validated by GBIF
Moreno-Leon & Ortega-
Rubio (2009)
Panama Gatun Lake, Panama Canal Male medusae 9-19 mm diameter Smith (1925)
Gatun Lake, La Chorrera, Panama
Oeste
(*) Collected in 2019. Validated by GBIF iNaturalist
Belize Green Hills Butterfly Ranch (Cayo
District)
(*) Collected in 2124. Not yet validated. iNaturalist
Costa Rica Arenal reservoir (Guanacaste) (*) Murillo (1989)
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Brazil, do not contain any type of morphologi-
cal information. The second oldest record of
C. sowerbii from Brazil was made for Martins
(1941) and he was the first author to assume
that this species has been introduced to the
country through fish imported from Europe.
The records from Brazil, Mexico, Panama,
Belize and Costa Rica are listed in Table 3.
Remarks of Hydra Linnaeus, 1758 [=
Pelmatohydra Schulze, 1914 = Clorohydra
Schulze, 1914 according to Schuchert (2022)]:
Sessile and solitary polyps that occurs in all
continents, except Antarctica (Jankowski et
al., 2008; Kaliszewicz, 2013). This genus can
be found in any reasonably unpolluted body
of freshwater during any season (Bossert &
Galliot, 2012). It is usually more abundant
in lentic waters, often attached to submerged
and floating macrophytes (Elliot et al., 1997;
Schwartz et al., 1983).
All Hydra sp. species constitute a mono-
phyletic clade (Collins et al., 2006) and are
clustered into four morphological groups:
viridissima, vulgaris, oligactis, and braueri, cor-
roborated by DNA analyses (Campbell, 1983;
Martínez et al., 2010).
Table 4 lists the most relevant results
for the genus Hydra in the mentioned study
area. Additionally, for Argentina, another four
records refer to Hydra plagiodesmica, but do not
provide morphological details (Alzugaray et al.,
2013, 2019, 2021; Poggio Herrero et al., 2014).
Also, Hydra have been reported in tributaries
Tabl e 4
Hydra Linnaeus, 1758 from Argentina, Uruguay, Chile, Brazil, Paraguay, Venezuela, Peru, Ecuador, Colombia, Panama,
Mexico, Costa Rica and Trinidad and Tobago. (*) No information.
Country Region Specie Morphological description Author
Argentina Río Salado (Santa Fé) Hydra
plagiodesmica
Green. Column 0-12 mm length. Six to
eight fine and long tentacles with three
distinctive growth patterns. Protandric
hermaphrodite. Embryotheca with
penta or hexagonal prisms. Pyriform
stenoteles, oval desmonemes, oval and
elongated holotrichous isorhiza
Dioni (1968)
Los Padres lagoon
(Buenos Aires)
Hydra
viridissima
Green. Column 1.82-3.10 mm
length. Five or six short, transparent
and moniliform tentacles. Pyriform
stenoteles, spherical desmonemes,
seed-shaped atrichous isorhiza and two
morphotypes of holotrichous isorhiza
Deserti (2016)
Nahuel Rucá lagoon
(Buenos Aires)
Hydra
viridissima
Green. Column 0.60-2.89 mm length.
Six to eight tentacles. Holotrichous
isorhiza slightly larger than the
stenoteles.
Deserti (2016)
Los Padres lagoon
(Buenos Aires)
Hydra vulgaris Brown. Column 1.98-9.88 mm length.
Six to nine moniliform large tentacles.
Dioecious. Round embryotheca.
Holotrichous isorhiza with paramecium
shape
Deserti, &
Zamponi
(2011)
La Brava (Buenos
Aires)
Hydra vulgaris Brown. Medium-sized. Five to eight
large, transparent and moniliform
tentacles with discontinuous pattern
growth. Separate sexes.
Deserti, (2016)
Nahuel Rucá (Buenos
Aires)
Hydra vulgaris Five to seven tentacles. Same
characteristic observed in La Brava
Deserti, (2016)
9
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Country Region Specie Morphological description Author
Los Padres, Nahuel
Rucá, La Brava lagoons
(Buenos Aires)
Hydra vulgaris
pedunculata
Brown. Stalk. Column 1.97-9.88 mm
length. Six or seven transparent,
moniliform large tentacles with growth
pattern discontinuous.
Deserti et al.
(2011) and
Deserti, (2016)
Nahuel Rucá (Buenos
Aires)
Hydra
pseudoligactis
Brown. Column 2.12-5.78 mm
length. Stalk. Six to nine transparent,
moniliform and large tentacles with
pattern growth typical of braueri group.
Deserti et al.
(2012)
Uruguay Santiago Vasquez,
Bellaca Canyon, stream
Miguelete and Arrozal
Treinta y Tres
Chlorohydra
viridissima
Green. Columns 0.5-5.5 mm in length.
Seven to ten tentacles. Some specimens
had simultaneously testes and ovaries.
Ootheca surrounded by a thin capsule
and attached by a conical funiculus to a
broad rim.
Cordero
(1941b)
Santiago Vasquez,
Bellaca Canyon, stream
Miguelete
Hydra
attenuata
thomseni
Orange to red. Straight column 4-12 mm
in length. Six to nine large tentacles with
pattern growth discontinuous. Stenoteles
with two measurements, pyriform
desmonemes, elliptical holotrichous
isorhiza and oval atrichous isorhiza.
Dioecius. Embryotheca with spines
Cordero
(1941b)
Chile Santiago de Chile Hydra grisea Orange. Column 14 mm in length. Six to
ten large tentacles. Unclear description
of nematocysts (measurements refer to
stenoteles, but drawings to atrichous
isorhiza)
Burger (1906)
Ñuñoa near Santiago
de Chile
Hydra viridis Green. Columns up to 6 mm in length.
Eight to ten tentacles. Only highlights
the longest stinging capsules (we assume
that it refers to stenoteles)
Burger (1906)
Strait of Magellan
(Punta Arenas)
Hydra
magellanica
Small stenoteles, oval holotrichous
ishorriza, elongated and oval atrichous
isorhiza
Schulze (1927)
Brazil Pernambuco state Hydra sp. (*) Schubart (1938)
Ceará state Hydra
viridissima
(*) Green Cordero (1939)
Alagôas, Paraiba and
Ceará states
Hydra iheringi Orange. Column 3-6 mm length. Four
to six tentacles
Cordero (1939)
o Paulo state Hydra
viridissima
Green. Column 1.55 mm length. Five to
nine short tentacles. Separated sexes
Carvalho
Whole (1978)
o Paulo state Hydra
intermedia
Brown. Column 2-12 mm length. Five
to nine short tentacles, arise on buds
successively. Dioecius. Embryotheca
with short spines
Carvalho
Whole (1978)
University of
São Carlos,
(São Paulo state)
Hydra
viridissima
Green. Column 0.8-2 mm length Massaro &
Rocha (2008)
10 Revista de Biología Tropical, ISSN: 2215-2075 Vol. 71(S3): e56470, agosto-diciembre 2023 (Publicado Set. 22, 2023)
Country Region Specie Morphological description Author
o Paulo state Hydra
salmacidis
Brown. Columns 8.6-12.5 mm length.
Four to eight filiform tentacles. Pattern
growth simultaneous. Monoecious,
protandrous with sex reversal. Rounded
embryotheca with small spines.
Stenotele larger than other types
Silveira et al.
(1997)
Paraguay Rio Paraná Hydra
paranensis
Light yellowish. Columns 4-5 mm
length. Oval stenoteles, oval and
elongated holotrichous isorhiza
Cernosvitov
(1935)
Hernandarias (Alto
Paraná)
Hydra sp.(*) Collected in 2016. Not yet validated iNaturalist
Venezuela Paraiso (Caracas) Hydra
viridissima
Green. Column 1-2 mm length.
Monoecius
Cordero
(1941b)
Paraiso (Caracas) Hydra sp. Pale yellow. Column up to 5 mm
length. Five to seven tentacles with
simultaneous growth. Oval stenoteles,
desmonemes and atrichous ishorriza,
oval and elongated holotrichous
isorhiza. Dioecious
Cordero
(1941b)
Peru Ojo del Milagro,
Characato district
(Arequipa)
Hydra vulgaris (*) Huarachi &
González
(2012)
ACTS Field Station
and Canopy Walkway,
Maynas (Loreto region)
Hydra sp. (*) Brown. Collected in 2019. Validated
by GBIF
iNaturalist
Ecuador Cumbayá (Quito),
Ibarra (Imbabura),
Pedro Moncayo
(Pichincha) and
Calvario and Sendero
Llaviucu (Azuay)
Hydra sp. (*) Collected in 2005, 2009, 2017, 2019
and 2021 Not yet validated
iNaturalist
Cumbayá and Huayna-
Capac (Azuay)
Hydra
viridissima
(*) Collected in 2019 and 2021.
Validated GBIF
iNaturalist
Colombia Bogotá (Cundinamarca)
and Santa Marta
(Magdalena)
Hydra sp. (*) Brown. Collected in 2019 and 2022.
Not yet validated
iNaturalist
Bogotá Hydra
viridissima
(*) Collected in 2017 and 2022.
Validated by GBIF
iNaturalist
Panama Antón River, Antón
Valley (Coclé)
Hydra vulgaris (*) Martinez et al.
(2010)
La Cabaña
(Boca del Toro)
Hydra sp.(*) Brown. Collected in 2017. Not yet
validated
iNaturalist
Mexico Lake Arareko
(Chihuahua)
Hydra vulgaris (*) Martinez et al.
(2010)
La Luna and El Sol
lakes (crater of the
Nevado de Toluca)
(State of Mexico)
Hydra vulgaris (*) Part of the benthic fauna Oseguera et al.
(2016)
11
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of the Río Paraná, however these works provide
little information associated with the speci-
mens, not even mention their colors (Marchese
& Drago, 1983; Paporello de Amsler, 1987).
The same happens with the records from Sauc-
esito and Las Tunas rivers (Río Paraná) (Pavé &
Marchese, 2005) and from Lake Nahuel Huapi,
Rio Negro (Trochine et al., 2008, 2009). The
same occurs with H. vulgaris which has been
reported in Argentina in five locations: two
from Córdoba province, one from Neuquén
province and two from Buenos Aires (Martínez
et al., 2010). These records do not include
morphological information associated with the
specimens. Finally, during 2019 and 2020, H.
viridissima was reported in Argentina from the
capital of Santa Fé province and specimens of
brown hydras from the department of Punilla,
Córdoba province, respectively and the data
was validated by GBIF site (iNaturalist, 2022).
In Bolivia, there are records of hydras in
the lagoons of the Trinidad flood zone (Pouilly
et al., 2004). However, they are somewhat
doubtful because do not provide additional
data on these observations (such as coloration,
size or number of specimens) on its own obser-
vations or those of other researchers, so we do
not know if they have been omitted or if their
occurrence is a mere assumption.
For Brazil, Cordero (1939) based the deci-
sion to name a new species for the genus Hydra
on the fact that the specimens differed from
others described for South America on the
dimensions of their nematocysts. Considering
the coloration and the presence of peduncle, the
species could belong to H. oligactis group or to
H. vulgaris pedunculata, a subspecies of the H.
vulgaris group.
In addition to the results listed in Table
4, there are four more records from Brazil:
from Governador José Richa plant in south-
ern, and brown polyps collected in Lago Sul
in Brasilia, and Rio Paranaíba in Minas Gerais
(Da Silva-Bertão et al., 2021; iNaturalist,
2022), all citations without morphological data
of the specimens.
In the case of Chile and in addition to
the records listed in Table 4, include the
findings of H. vulgaris from Punta Arenas
and H. viridissima from Puerto Guadal, all
of them without morphological descriptions
(Martínez et al., 2010).
The records of Hydra sp. listed in Table 4
from Colombia, Ecuador, Costa Rica, Mexico,
Panamá, Perú and Trinidad and Tobago, do not
contain morphological descriptions.
Summary on the state of the of freshwater
hydrozoan in the Neotropical region
There are approximately 170 records of
freshwater hydrozoans from fifteen countries of
the Neotropical region. Panama has the greatest
Country Region Specie Morphological description Author
Dolores, Tepotzotlán
(State of Mexico)
Hydra sp. (*) Rivera De la
Parra et al.
(2016)
Santiago (Nuevo
León), Lerma (State of
México) and Coyoacán
(Mexico City)
Hydra
viridissima
(*) Collected in 2018 and 2020.
Validated by GBIF
iNaturalist
Presa del Llano,
Villa del Carbón
(State of Mexico)
Hydra oligactis (*) Collected in 2021. Not yet validated.
Only consider as brown hydras
iNaturalist
Costa Rica Arenal lagoon, Piedras
River, De Los Ahogados
River and tiny brook near
Limonal (Guanacaste)
Hydra vulgaris (*) Martinez et al.
(2010)
Trinidad and
Tobago
Dibe, Port of Spain (Diego
Martin region)
Hydra sp.(*) Brown. Collected in 2021. Not yet
validated
iNaturalist
12 Revista de Biología Tropical, ISSN: 2215-2075 Vol. 71(S3): e56470, agosto-diciembre 2023 (Publicado Set. 22, 2023)
number of records, followed by Brazil, Argen-
tina, Chile, Mexico, and Uruguay (Fig. 1). Most
of the records from Panama are represented by
preserved specimens of C. caspia deposited in
NMNH, rather than bibliographic citations.
Among the various countries, C. sowerbii
leds the records from Brazil and Chile, Hydra
sp. from Argentina and Uruguay, and Cordy-
lophora sp. from Mexico. The genus Hydra
sp. is the most of cited overall. For this genus,
Argentina has the greatest number of records
and diversity of species (four species and one
subspecies), followed by Brazil with four spe-
cies, three of which are endemic. Chile and Par-
aguay share the same situation as Brazil, with
the endemics H. magellanica and H. paranensis,
respectively, the latter species being the second
oldest report of the genus for South America.
The first official record of freshwater
hydrozoans in the Neotropical region was made
with the discovery of Hydra sp. in Chile by
Burger in 1906. However, the author does not
guarantee the name of this species and only
mentions the morphological similarities with
H. grisea Linnaeus, 1767, which was originally
described only from North America and later
considered synonymous with H. vulgaris. Con-
sequently, these specimens are now cited as
Hydra sp. officially.
Since this first record, many species have
been described, leading to some limitations,
for example, over the time many of these spe-
cies have been rejected and accepted as syn-
onyms, primarily for H. vulgaris Pallas, 1766.
This species has nine synonyms: H. grisea
Linnaeus, 1767; H. vulgaris var. aurantiaca
Ehrenberg, 1838; H. carnea L. Agassiz, 1851; H.
trembleyi Haacke, 1879; H. americana Hyman,
1931; H. littoralis Hyman, 1931; Moerisia alberti
Leloup, 1938; H. magnipapillata Itô, 1947 and
recently, H. shenzhensis Wang & Deng, 2012
(Schuchert, 2022).
A similar case occurs with H. circum-
cincta Schulze, 1914 of the braueri group, that
has seven synonyms, of which H. attenua-
ta Pallas, 1766 is the most cited in the lit-
erature (Schuchert, 2022). However, Lenhoff
(1983), Campbell (1987) and Holstein et al.
Fig. 1. Distribution and morphologies of the four genera of freshwater hydrozoans for the study area. A. South America.
B. Central America, the Caribbean and Mexico and C. Morphologies of the four genera (modified from Campbell, 2016).
13
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(1990), considered H. attenuata as synonym
of H. vulgaris. H. littoralis, H. vulgaris and H.
magnipapillata are species restricted to North
American territory, Europe, and Japan, respec-
tively. Today, these three species are considered
as H. vulgaris.
While Campbell (1987) and Holstein et al.
(1990) consider H. oligactis as a cosmopolitan
species, Jankowski et al. (2008) restricts the
oligactis group to North America and Eurasia.
In addition, they consider the species of the
vulgaris group as cosmopolitan with slight dif-
ferences between H. vulgaris from boreal and
southern zones.
Such has been the confusion in this genus
that even Wagner (1833) described the new
species Hydra aculeata, a species later con-
sidered a basonym of Hydractinia aculeata, a
marine colonial hydrozoan that belongs to the
suborder Filifera.
Cordero (1941b) described the subspecies
H. attenuata thomseni from Uruguay, which
was later rejected as a parent of H. attenuata =
H. circumcincta. However, it was subsequently
promoted to a species and renamed H. thom-
seni by Schuchert in 2022. In addition, Cor-
dero (1941b) reported on specimens found in
Venezuela but did not assign them the species
rank. The observed morphological character-
istics of these specimens resemble those of the
North American species H. littoralis, which is a
synonym of H. vulgaris. Therefore, it is highly
likely that Corderos finding corresponds to
the cosmopolitan H. vulgaris, as in the case
of Burger (1906). The variety of reproductive
strategies in this group reinforces the notion
that Corderos finding corresponds to H. vul-
garis (Campbell, 1987; Lenhoff, 1983).
The records of H. vulgaris from other ten
countries, expands knowledge about their dis-
tribution and reinforces the idea of Jankowski
et al. (2008) that it is a cosmopolitan species.
The records of Martínez et al. (2010) from
Chile show that the species has reached the
southernmost point of the American continent
and could even validate the idea that the speci-
mens found by Burger (1906) from Santiago de
Chile corresponded to the species H. vulgaris.
The species H. magellanica, described by
Schulze (1927) from the Strait of Magellan,
could belong to the vulgaris group or even be a
synonym of H. vulgaris. Although it currently
retains its species status (Schuchert, 2022), a
new review may be needed given the antiquity
of its finding and the contributions made by
Martínez et al. (2010).
The anatomical difference found in the
subspecies H. vulgaris pedunculata is not mani-
fested at the molecular level, since the conspic-
uous and translucent peduncle, is a variation
that could respond solely to a phenotypic mani-
festation (Deserti, 2016). Martínez et al. (2010)
and Schwentner & Bosch (2015) worked with
Hydra sp. sequences of DNA from Chile and
Argentina, which are available in GenBank, that
showed clear differences in their mitochondrial
and nuclear markers, despite occurring sympat-
rically. Schwentner & Bosch (2015) proposed
that this difference may indicate that H. vul-
garis pedunculata should be promoted in rank,
declared as a new species. However, the results
obtained in the study of biodiversity of the
genus carried out by Deserti (2016), completely
rule out this interpretation, but does not dis-
card the possibility that other species exist. It is
a clear example of the existence of intraspecific
morphological variations that may have been,
until today, one of the causes of misinterpreta-
tion in the naming of new species.
Other variations or subspecies have been
reported in the literature, such as H. vulgaris
var. aurantiaca Ehrenberg, 1838 and H. attenu-
ata thomseni for Uruguay (Cordero, 1941a). In
WoRMS, the first one has been synonymized as
H. vulgaris (Schuchert, 2020). The second one,
as mentioned earlier, has been promoted to the
rank of species.
The viridissima group have been reported
in eight countries: Argentina, Brazil, Chile,
Uruguay, Venezuela, Mexico, Ecuador and
Colombia, represented by the species H. viridi-
ssima. Argentina is the only country with a
second species of this group: H. plagiodesmica,
but its description does not clearly distinguish
it from the species H. viridissima, H. sinensis
and H. hadleyi, so the validity of the species has
14 Revista de Biología Tropical, ISSN: 2215-2075 Vol. 71(S3): e56470, agosto-diciembre 2023 (Publicado Set. 22, 2023)
been questioned (Campbell, 1987; Grayson,
1971). However, in WoRMS it is considered as
a valid report.
The genus Calpasoma sp. is the least rep-
resented and cited with only four records from
South America. Given the difficulty of finding
it, due to its small size and soft body, it is likely
that its abundance is underestimated. In fact, if
we consider this polyp as part of the life cycle of
Craspedacusta sp., the records of Calpasoma sp.
should coincide, at least asynchronously, with
those of that jellyfish stage.
The case of invasive freshwater hydrozoans
The genus Craspedacusta sp. is the third
one of freshwater hydrozoans with the largest
number of records. The first report was made
by Smith (1925) for Panama, but Chile is the
country with more records of this genus and
where the only molecular analysis on this genus
until today has been done.
This genus includes a still uncertain num-
ber of hydromedusan species (Jankowski et al.,
2008). The most reported around the world is
C. sowerbii Lankester, 1880. As in the genus
Hydra sp., the taxonomy of Craspedacusta sp.
is unsettled because of the large morphologi-
cal plasticity of the medusa stage (Lewis et
al., 2012). Of the three species recognized as
valid by the barcode of life database, C. kiat-
ingi, C. sowerbii and C. sinensis, only C. sow-
erbii is recognized as a global invader of lakes
(Fritz et al., 2009).
Although C. sowerbii is considered an inva-
sive species, native of the Yangtze River basin
in China, the type specimens described came
from a water–lily tank in Regent’s Park, Lon-
don, England in 1880 (Kramp, 1961; Lankester,
1880). For Oualid et al. (2019) it is somewhat
ironic that the type locality and the origin of
this species are not the same, besides they point
out that, in the type locality of C. sowerbii, the
aquatic plants of the water–lily tank in Regent’s
Park (i.e., the potential dispersal vector) were
imported from Brazil, and not from China, a
fact that could complicate more the scenario
about the true origin of this species.
Another problem related to the genus
Craspedacusta sp. is the difficulty of finding its
polyp form. For Duggan & Eastwood (2012), C.
sowerbii is more common and widespread than
it appears from jellyfish observations, making it
difficult to estimate the timing of the introduc-
tion of this species to a given region using only
the jellyfish findings.
As this species of hydromedusa is reported
in lists of exotic species, the correct identi-
fication of the different lineages becomes an
urgent challenge to correctly understand the
number of invasion events and the species of
the genus Craspedacusta that could be involved.
(Oualid et al., 2019).
The colonial polyp Cordylophora caspia
that has been reported in Argentina, Uruguay,
Chile, Brazil, Colombia and Mexico, is also
considered an alien species that besides causing
ecological damage, adds an economic problem
since it clogs the hydraulic and cooling systems
of hydroelectric plants (Grohmann, 2008). This
is one of the reasons for the considerable num-
ber of reports of this species for Panama in dif-
ferent sections of the Panama Canal, all of them
without morphological information.
The citation of Gaggero (1923) of C. lacus-
tris in Argentina, is the first mention of the
genus Cordylophora from South America and
the records of Hildebrand (1939) in Panama,
the first one for Central America.
The taxonomy of this genus is character-
ized by the same interpretation problems as
Hydra sp. and Craspedacusta sp., even some
works have suggested that C. caspia may be
a complex of species, because its high degree
morphological plasticity (Folino-Rorem et. al.,
2005). These authors stated that at least C. cas-
pia and C. lacustris are synonyms but suggested
the integration of molecular and morphological
analyses to clarify this question.
The analysis presented here demonstrates
three important points: 1) freshwater hydro-
zoans are a frequent group in the Neotropical
fauna; 2) given the appearance of the four
genera in very dissimilar natural environments
(even a point as southern as the Strait of Magel-
lan), we can infer the existence of this group
15
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of cnidarians in those territories for which
there are still no official reports; and 3) a re-
examination of the cited species is imperative,
with solid molecular bases that clear up those
doubts about the really valid species, which
would allow to establish the true geographic
and phylogenetic distribution map, especially
for those invasive species,
KEYS TO CNIDARIA (modified from Deserti et al. 2020)
CLASS HYDROZOA: Families
Note: Cordylophora caspia is a synonym of C. lacustris Allman, 1844.
1 Medusae or solitary polyps with or without buds .................................... 2
1’ Branching colonies with polyps with several tentacles and a stolon attached to a substratum
Oceaniidae, one species: Cordylophora caspia Pallas, 1771 [Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay,
Colombia, Mexico and Panama]
2(1) Medusa form or polyps < 1 mm in length .................................. Olindiidae
2’ Single polyps >1 mm in length ........... Hydridae, one genus: Hydra [Argentina, Brazil,
Chile, Uruguay, Paraguay, Peru, Venezuela, Colombia, Mexico, Panama, Costa Rica, Bolivia,
Ecuador and Trinidad and Tobago]
HYDROZOA: OLINDIIDAE: Genera
Note: these two forms may be conspecific.
1 Polypoid and medusoid forms; polyps colonial, lacking tentacles .... Craspedacusta sowerbii
Lankester, 1880 [Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Uruguay, Venezuela, Mexico, Panama, Belize and
Costa Rica]
1’ Only solitary polypoid forms with tentacles .... Calpasoma dactylopterum Fhurmann, 1939
[Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay]
HYDROZOA: HYDRIDAE: HYDRA: Groups and species
1 Polyps not green; stenotele >11 mm in length; embryotheca either not piled or not roughly spheri-
cal ............................................................................. 2
1’ Green polyps due to endosymbiotic algae; nematocysts small; viridissima group ......... 4
2(1) Holotrichous isorhiza narrowly oval or reniform, width <0.5 length; embryotheca not flat-
tened .......................................................................... 3
2’ Holotrichous isorhiza broadly fusiform; embryotheca flattened against substratum ..braueri
group
3(2) Young bud lateral tentacles arising conspicuously early; conspicuous peduncle; embryotheca
smooth and thin .................................................... oligactis group
3’ Young bud tentacles arising in slightly staggered sequence or discontinuous; embryotheca
thick with numerous radial spines ....................... vulgaris group [Cosmopolitan]
4(1) Holotrichous isorhiza reniform; embryotheca with one narrow chamber proximal to embryo
Hydra viridissima Pallas, 1766 [Cosmopolitan]
4’ Holotrichous isorhiza stubby, not reniform; embryotheca with basal chambers in young
embryos ................................. Hydra plagiodesmica Dioni, 1968 [Argentina]
16 Revista de Biología Tropical, ISSN: 2215-2075 Vol. 71(S3): e56470, agosto-diciembre 2023 (Publicado Set. 22, 2023)
Ethical statement: the authors declare that
they all agree with this publication and made
significant contributions; that there is no con-
flict of interest of any kind; and that we fol-
lowed all pertinent ethical and legal procedures
and requirements. All financial sources are fully
and clearly stated in the acknowledgments sec-
tion. A signed document has been filed in the
journal archives.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
SNS was supported by São Paulo
Research Foundation (FAPESP) grant number
2019/03552-0 and CNPq (Research Productiv-
ity Scholarship) grant number 301293/2019-8.
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