Original description Lesueur and Petit introduced the name
Physalia megalista in 1807 and published a coloured plate illustrating the float and tentacles. No type specimen from the original material is known to be preserved, which contributed to later uncertainty in applying the name. Because original type material is missing, later stabilisation of the name may require application of provisions of the
International Code of Zoological Nomenclature for
neotype designation (Article 75), as discussed in modern revisions of
Physalia taxonomy. The species is listed as valid in the
World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS).
Context within the genus All members of
Physalia share key morphological traits such as a surface float and specialised zooid types. Because earlier literature often lacked consistent diagnostic measurements (for example, float dimensions and tentacle traits), many colonies were historically identified under
P. physalis rather than separated into multiple species.
Taxonomic confusion and nomenclatural issues During the 19th and 20th centuries, variation among
Physalia colonies was commonly interpreted as intraspecific, and
P. megalista was frequently treated as a junior synonym of
P. physalis. Modern revisions have re-examined Lesueur’s 1807 illustration alongside contemporary, well-documented specimens and applied current taxonomic standards to delimit species boundaries within
Physalia. == Research history ==