Nymphaster arenatus ( Perrier, 1881 )
publication ID |
https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.4955.1.1 |
publication LSID |
lsid:zoobank.org:pub:E800A72A-C56A-492C-9EE6-FA4F8277DE31 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4701419 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/FF6987EE-FF8E-FFF2-FF54-43F97E7AF8EB |
treatment provided by |
Plazi (2021-04-15 02:28:19, last updated 2021-09-19 03:58:44) |
scientific name |
Nymphaster arenatus ( Perrier, 1881 ) |
status |
|
Nymphaster arenatus ( Perrier, 1881)
Figures 19–20 View FIGURE 19 View FIGURE 20
Pentagonaster arenatus Perrier, 1881: 21 ; 1884: 236, pl. 7, figs. 3–4.
Nympluister basilicus — Tommasi, 1970: 12, fig. 35.
Nymphaster arenatus — Clark & Downey 1992: 254–255, figs. 38d, 41e, f, pl. 61A–C; Entrambasaguas 2003: 95; Entrambasa- guas 2008: 59; Campos et al. 2010b: 149, fig. 5C; Benavides-Serrato et al. 2011: 165; Costa et al. 2015; Soaréz 2016: 78; Sandino et al. 2017: S294; Rubio-Polania et al. 2018: 190; Borrero-Peìrez et al. 2019: 5; Mah 2020b: 230, fig. 13A–E.
Material examined. (4 specs, 45–70 mm R). BRAZIL. Bahia, Canavieiras (15º39’S; 38º32’W)— 1496 m, 26.xii.1887, 4 specs, R GoogleMaps 45–70 mm ( USNM 18524 About USNM ) .
Comparative material. BRAZIL. Rio de Janeiro, Cabo Frio (19°43’S; 38°36’W), 29.vi.1999, 1 spec, R GoogleMaps 52 mm ( EQMN 2325 ) .
Description (arms broken: R 70 mm, r 21 mm and R 69 mm and r 27 mm). Body stellate, flat, broad disc, long arms ( Fig. 19A–B View FIGURE 19 ); R/r 2.9, 19 SM plates, R/SM# 3.68. Abactinal plates low-tabulate, irregularly round, completely covered by regularly spaced, rounded granules; 4–12 central granules. Some plates with small, excavated sugar-tong pedicellariae ( Fig. 19C View FIGURE 19 ). Papular area includes center of disc; six papular pores surround each plate; single papule in each pore. Madreporite larger than adjacent abactinal plates ( Fig. 19D View FIGURE 19 ). Subcentral anus, surrounded by small, conical spinelets. Superomarginal plates in contact throughout length of arm, covered by large, regularly-spaced, rounded granules. Terminal plates of specimens broken. Inferomarginal plates about twice as wide as long in interradial arc, square-shaped in middle region of arm and about twice as long as wide in distal region of arm. Granulation of inferomarginal plates similar to that of superomarginal plates. Actinal plates rhombic to polygonal, covered by regularly spaced, large, rounded granules slightly larger than those on marginal plates. Some actinal plates with excavate, sugar-tong pedicellariae almost twice as large as abactinal pedicellariae. Adambulacral plates about 1–1.5x as long as wide, half the size of adjacent actinal plates. Furrow margin strongly angular. Apophyses poorly developed from 3 rd –4 th plate, fully developed from eighth plate ( Fig. 19E View FIGURE 19 ). Eight adambulacral spines on proximal plates; number of spines increases with apophysis development, up to 11 spines distally ( Fig. 19F View FIGURE 19 ). Adambulacral spines compressed, moderately long, with rounded tips. 3–4 irregular rows of subambulacral “spines” with 4–5 large, rounded granules slightly taller than actinal granules. Some of first row spines elongated ( Fig. 19F View FIGURE 19 ). Spatulate pedicellariae with 2–4 valves, until 4 th –5 th adambulacral plate. Oral plates long, triangular, with 9–10 spines each, similar to those of adambulacral plates; median spines slightly taller and more compressed than others ( Fig. 19H View FIGURE 19 ).
Ontogenetic variation (arms broken: R 45 and 55 mm, r 15 mm). Average R/r 3.3. Differ from largest specimen by having 4–8 central granules on abactinal plates ( Fig. 20C View FIGURE 20 ); six adambulacral spines in the proximal region; 2–3 irregular rows of subambulacral “spines”, with 2–5 granules ( Fig. 20F View FIGURE 20 ); pedicellariae until the tenth adambulacral plate ( Fig. 20F View FIGURE 20 ); eight oral spines ( Fig. 20H View FIGURE 20 ).
Coloration. The abactinal surface is orange and the actinal surface is cream-colored ( Halpern 1970b).
Distribution. Gulf of Mexico, Mexico, Nicaragua, Colombia (Soaréz 2016; Sandino et al. 2017; Rubio-Polania et al. 2018; Borrero-Peìrez et al. 2019; Mah 2020b). BRAZIL: Bahia, Rio de Janeiro ( Ventura et al. 2007; Campos et al. 2010b; Costa et al. 2015). Depth. 100–3000 m ( Clark & Downey 1992; NMNH 1592525; FSBC I 74877 View Materials ).
Biological notes. Nymphaster arenatus lives on soft, unconsolidated sediment and is classified as scavenger and predator ( Costa et al. 2015; Wagstaff et al. 2014; Mah 2020b). It feeds on fouling organisms, debris, epifauna and decomposing organisms ( Ventura et al. 2007). Campos et al. (2010b) filmed a specimen with an inflated disc in the Campus Basin, between 700–1000 m of depth. A species of polychaete has been found within thestar’s interradius, possibly in a commensal interaction in which the polychaete consumes leftovers from food caught by the sea star ( Mah 2020b).
Lectotype. MCZ 437 About MCZ (designated by Halpern [1970b]).
Type locality. Off Barbados ( Halpern 1970b).
Remarks. All specimens examined here have broken arm-tips such that the number of superomarginal plates could not be counted. Some of the ontogenetic variation observed here were also noted by Halpern (1970b). The variation in number of proximal adambulacral spines, however, is not consistent across studies. The specimens R 45–55 mm described here and the specimen from Rio de Janeiro (R 52 mm) have six spines, the specimen described by Clark & Downey (1992) (R 61 mm) has about seven spines; the specimens R 69–70 mm described here have 7–8 spines, and the specimen described by Halpern (1970b) (R 96 mm) has 6–7 spines. The variation in the number of irregular rows of subambulacral “spines” seems to be more consistent. The specimens R 45–55 mm have 2–3 rows, the specimen R 61 mm has 1–4 rows, and the specimens R 69–96 mm have 3–4 rows. The same applies for the number of oral spines as follows: the specimens R 45–55 mm have 6–8 spines, the specimen R 61 mm has 8–12 spines, the specimens R 69–70 have 9–10 spines and the specimen 96 mm has 10–11 spines. Fisher (1913) used this character to separate species of Nymphaster from the Philippines and most likely overestimated the number of species recorded: a total of nine.
Genus Plinthaster Verrill, 1899
Type species. Plinthaster dentatus ( Perrier, 1884) (type by subsequent designation by Fisher, 1910).
Remarks. Plinthaster has four valid species: P. ceramoidea ( Fisher, 1906) (Pacific Ocean), P. dentatus ( Perrier, 1884) (Amphiatlantic, and Pacific Ocean), P. lenaigae Mah, 2018 and P. untiedtae Mah, 2018 (Indian Ocean). Only P. dentatus is recorded in Brazil.
Benavides-Serrato, M., Borrero-Perez, G. & Diaz-Sanchez, C. (2011) Equinodermos del caribe colombiano: Crinodea, Asteroidea y Ophiuroidea. Vol. 1. Marquillas, Santa Marta, 384 pp.
Campos, L. S., Moura, R. B., Alcantara, P. F., Vasconcelos, R. F., Curbelo-Fernandez, M. P., Verissimo, I. & Cavalcanti, G. H. (2010 b) On two new records of the Family Brisingidae (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from the Brazilian continental margin. In: Harris, L. G., Boettger, S. A., Walker, C. W. & Lesser, M. P. (Eds.), Proceedings of the 12 th International Echinoderm Conference, Durham, New Hampshire, 7 - 11 August 2006. CRC Press Boca Raton, Florida and Balkema Taylor & Francis Group, London, pp. 139 - 146. https: // doi. org / 10.1201 / 9780203869543 - c 21
Clark, A. M. & Downey, M. E. (1992) Starfishes of the Atlantic. Chapman and Hall, London, 794 pp. https: // doi. org / 10.5860 / choice. 30 - 2659
Costa, P. A. S., Mincarone, M. M., Braga, A. C., Martins, A. S., Lavrado, H. P., Haimovici, M. & Falcao, A. P. C. (2015) Megafaunal communities along a depth gradient on the tropical Brazilian continental margin. Marine Biology Research, 11 (10), 1053 - 1064. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 17451000.2015.1062521
Entrambasaguas, L. (2003) Estudio de la fauna de equinodermos del archipielago de Cabo Verde: escalas de variabilidad espacial y factores que explican su distribucion. Tesis de licenciatura no publicada. Universidad de Murcia, Murcia. [unknown pagination]
Fisher, W. K. (1906) The starfishes of the Hawaiian Islands. Bulletin of the United States Fish Commission, 23, 987 - 1130.
Fisher, W. K. (1910) New genera of starfishes. Annals and Magazine of Natural History, Series 8, 5 (26), 171 - 173. https: // doi. org / 10.1080 / 00222931008692747
Fisher, W. K. (1913) Four new genera and fifty-eight new species of starfishes from the Philippine Islands, Celebes, and the Moluccas. Proceedings of the US National Museum, 43, 599 - 648. https: // doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 00963801.43 - 1944.599
Halpern, J. A. (1970 b) Goniasteridae (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) of the straits of Florida. Bulletin of Marine Science, 20 (1), 193 - 286.
Mah, C. L. (2018) New genera, species and occurrence records of Goniasteridae (Asteroidea; Echinodermata) from the Indian Ocean. Zootaxa, 4539 (1), 1 - 116. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4539.1.1
Mah, C. L. (2020 b) New species, occurrence records and observations of predation by deep-sea Asteroidea (Echinodermata) from the North Atlantic by NOAA ship Okeanos Explorer. Zootaxa, 4766 (2), 201 - 260. https: // doi. org / 10.11646 / zootaxa. 4766.2.1
Perrier, E. (1881) Description sommaire des especes nouvelles d'Asteries. Museum of Comparative Zoology Bulletin, 9, 1 - 31.
Perrier, E. (1884) Memoire sur les etoiles de mer recueillies dans la mer des Antilles et le golfe du Mexique: durant les expeditions de dragace faites sous la direction de M. Alexandre Agassiz. Archives Museum National d'histoire Naturelle Paris, 6 (2), 127 - 276. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. title. 82184
Rubio-Polania, J. C., Torruco-Gomez, D., Gonzalez-Solis, A., Ordaz, J. & Caamal-Jimenez, Y. (2018) Benthic megafauna of outer margins of the continental shelf of Yucatan Peninsula. Regional Studies in Marine Science, 24, 184 - 195. https: // doi. org / 10.1016 / j. rsma. 2018.08.014
Sandino, O. B., Solis-Marin, F. A., Caballero-Ochoa, A. A., Conejeros-Vargas, C. A., Marquez-Borras, F., Ayala-Aguilera, A. P. & Laguarda-Figueras, A. (2017) Equinodermos de Nicaragua: nuevos registros del Pacifico y Caribe Sur. Revista de Biologia Tropical, 65, 288 - 298. https: // doi. org / 10.15517 / rbt. v 65 i 1 - 1.31696
Tommasi, L. R. (1970) Lista dos asteroides recentes do Brasil. Contribuicoes Avulsas do Instituto Oceanografico, Universidade de Sao Paulo, 18, 1 - 61, 38 pls.
Ventura, C. R. R., Verissimo, I., Nobre, C. C. & Zama, P. C. (2007) Filo Echinodermata. In: Lavrado, H. P. & Viana, M. S. (Eds.), Atlas de invertebrados marinhos da regiao central da Zona Economica Exclusiva brasileira. Parte 1. Museu Nacional do Rio de Janeiro, Serie Livros 25. Museu Nacional do Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, pp. 258.
Verrill, A. E. (1899) Revision of certain genera and species of starfishes, with descriptions of new forms. Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences, 10 (1), 145 - 234. https: // doi. org / 10.5962 / bhl. part. 7031
Wagstaff, M. C., Howell, K. L., Bett, B. J., Billett, D. S. M., Brault, S., Stuart, C. T. & Rex, M. A. (2014) β-diversity of deep-sea holothurians and asteroids along a bathymetric gradient (NE Atlantic). Marine Ecology Progress Series, 508, 177 - 185. https: // doi. org / 10.3354 / meps 10877
FIGURE 19. Specimen (R 70 mm) of Nymphaster arenatus (Perrier, 1881) (USNM 18524): (A) abactinal and (B) actinal view of body; (C) abactinal plates (arrows indicate pedicellariae site); (D) madreporite; (E) apophysis in the adambulacral plates; (F) furrow spines (arrows indicate pedicellariae site); (G) interradial actinal region; and (H) oral region. Scale bars: A–B, 30 mm; C–D, 3 mm; E–G, 2 mm; H, 4 mm.
FIGURE 20. Specimen (R 55 mm) of Nymphaster arenatus (Perrier, 1881) (USNM 18524): (A) abactinal and (B) actinal view of body; (C) abactinal plates; (D) madreporite; (E) inferomarginal plates and furrow spines; (F) furrow spines and pedicellariae (black arrows); (G) interradial actinal region; and (H) oral region. Scale bars: A–B, 20 mm; C, F, 2 mm; D, 1 mm; E, G–H, 4 mm.
R |
Departamento de Geologia, Universidad de Chile |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Nymphaster arenatus ( Perrier, 1881 )
Cunha, Rosana, Martins, Luciana, Menegola, Carla & Souto, Camilla 2021 |
Pentagonaster arenatus
Entrambasaguas, L. 2003: 95 |
Clark, A. M. & Downey, M. E. 1992: 254 |
Tommasi, L. R. 1970: 12 |
Perrier, E. 1884: 236 |
Perrier, E. 1881: 21 |
1 (by plazi, 2021-04-15 02:28:19)
2 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-04-15 03:08:18)
3 (by valdenar, 2021-04-19 16:54:52)
4 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-04-19 17:10:01)
5 (by ExternalLinkService, 2021-09-19 03:58:44)
6 (by ExternalLinkService, 2023-07-18 13:11:08)
7 (by ExternalLinkService, 2023-07-18 13:26:54)