Relicanthus daphneae
For the Pokémon species with a similar name, see Relicanth
Relicanthus daphneae is a cnidarian which occurs in the depths of the East Pacific Rise and was described in 2006. It is the only known member of the suborder Helenmonae within the order Actiniaria.
Taxonomy
Relicanthus daphneae was originally described as a member of the genus Boloceroides, but the name Boloceroides daphneae is no longer accepted after it was determined that this species belongs in the genus Relicanthus.A phylogenetic study was completed in 2014, in which three genes of mitochondrial DNA and two genes from the nucleus of over a hundred different sea anemones were compared, suggesting that the species instead belonged in a new order of Hexacorallia.
A new genus, Relicanthus, was named to accommodate this alternate classification. The specific name daphneae was chosen after Daphne Gail Fautin, a scientist who primarily studied sea anemones, "in honor of her contributions to actiniarian systematics".
In December 2019 the American Museum of Natural History announced that new research had classified R. daphneae as a new suborder of Actiniaria, Helenmonae, rather than as a new order.
This new classification was later confirmed by another phylogenetic study.