Atheraster arandae ( Mah 2006 ), 2022

Mah, Christopher L., 2022, New Genera, Species and Occurrences of Deep-Sea Asteroidea (Valvatacea, Forcipulatacea, Echinodermata) collected from the North Pacific Ocean by the CAPSTONE Expedition, Zootaxa 5164 (1), pp. 1-75 : 26

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.5164.1.1

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:3BECB9C7-F4B5-4FA4-934B-1822BF3D1077

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03CE851E-9232-E962-EBF9-4F0BFC7DF80B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Atheraster arandae ( Mah 2006 )
status

 

Atheraster arandae ( Mah 2006) View in CoL nov. gen, nov. comb.

FIGURE 8C–E View FIGURE 8

Circeaster Mah 2006: 934 View in CoL View Cited Treatment

Diagnosis. Body stellate (R/r>4.0), small disk, arms narrow. Abactinal arm plates bare, transition between large arm plates and smaller disk plates abrupt. Marginal plates with prominent spine and abundance of smaller, secondary spinelets, especially on ventrolateral edge. Furrow spines 12–15, distinct adambulacral pedicellariae, paddleshaped. Adambulacral plate surface covered by 5–7 spinelets or rough-tipped granules.

Comments. The type locality and the earliest known collected specimens for this species were from the western Indian Ocean in the waters around Madagascar from 1600–2000 m depths with a subsequent specimen discovered from New Caledonia from 2160 m ( Mah 2006) .

This species was originally distinguished from Circeaster spp. by its elongate arms and by both series of marginal plates bearing prominent conical spines. As indicated below, it bears a strong resemblance with Atheraster symphonia n. sp. in sharing the presence of sharp spines on the superomarginal and inferomarginal plates. The individuals observed herein did not show granulation on the abactinal surface plates as they would on A. symphonia n. sp.

Individuals imaged during the CAPSTONE expedition are the first members of this species observed in situ and indicate a widespread occurrence for this species from the Indian Ocean to the North Pacific. Individuals from Salmon Bank in the Hawaiian Islands ( Fig. 8C, D View FIGURE 8 ) and Rose Atoll in American Samoa ( Fig. 8E View FIGURE 8 ) were observed feeding on isidid octocorals (commonly known as bamboo corals) in a manner typical of other goniasterid octocoral predators with the coral stalk engulfed within the ambulacral furrow and covered by tube feet and the extended pyloric stomach with absent polyps below the animal as it was climbing up the stalk.

Occurrence: Hawaiian Islands, American Samoa region, New Caledonia, Madagascar, 1600–2439 m.

Images Examined long armed morph. Salmon Bank , Hawaiian Islands, 26.81819568, -176.3150506, 1949 m. EX1504 L2_IMG_ 20150811 T222348 Z_ ROVHD _ASRAUD.jpg GoogleMaps

short armed morph. Salmon Bank , Hawaiian Islands, 26.81694605, -176.315139, 2007 m. EX1504 L2_IMG_20150811 T205435 Z_ ROVHD _COR_ ASR _EATING.jpg (feeding on Isididae ) GoogleMaps

Karin Ridge , Hawaiian Islands, 16.143169, -167.8556648, 1967 m EX1504 L4_IMG_20150922 T200931 Z_ ROVHD _ ASR.jpg GoogleMaps

Rose Atoll, American Samoa, -14.53758332, -168.080719, 2439 m. ( Fig. 8E View FIGURE 8 ) EX1702 _IMG_20170218 T234059 Z_ ROVHD.jpg (feeding on Isididae ) GoogleMaps

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Echinodermata

Class

Asteroidea

Order

Valvatida

Family

Goniasteridae

Genus

Atheraster

Loc

Atheraster arandae ( Mah 2006 )

Mah, Christopher L. 2022
2022
Loc

Circeaster

Mah, C. L. 2006: 934
2006
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