Henricia pumila sp. nov.: A brooding seastar (Asteroidea) from the coastal northeastern Pacific
Author
Eernisse, Douglas J.
Author
Strathmann, Megumi F.
Author
Strathmann, Richard R.
text
Zootaxa
2010
2329
22
36
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.275445
406e7277-8fee-473b-98b5-3a881decf7db
1175-5326
275445
Henricia pumila
,
n. sp.
Figs. 1
B, 3B–D, 4B–C, 5B, 5D, 5F–G
Type
Material:
Holotype
USNM
1116585;
paratypes
USNM
1116586;
CASIZ
180559
and
180560
;
LACM
1987- 519.001 and 2005-065.001;
MFS
109
Type
Locality:
Mar Vista Resort, San Juan Island, Washington,
USA
(48°28.595ʹN 123°04.015ʹW), rocky intertidal under rock in tidepool
?
Cribrella laeviuscula
var.
crassa
H.L. Clark 1901
:328
Henricia leviuscula
variety F, in part,
Fisher 1911
(see also
Feder, 1980
;
Lambert, 1981
;
Mah, 2007
)
Henricia leviuscula
(
non
Stimpson, 1857
); in part,
Hopkins, 1967
: 19
–23, 65–68
Other material examined:
More than
100 specimens
in our collections from the San Juan Archipelago, San Juan Co., Washington, plus other specimens from southern Vancouver Island, British
Columbia
,
Canada
, intertidal; Bodega Head, Sonoma Co., California, intertidal; Franklin Pt., San Mateo Co., California, intertidal; Monterey Breakwater, Monterey Co., California, approx.
12–15 m
, including one brooding female; Shelter Cove, between Shell Beach and Pismo Beach, San Luis Obispo Co., California, intertidal; Arbolitos, south of Punta Banda, Baja California,
Mexico
, intertidal. Museum specimens identified included:
USNM
1083883 (
3 in
lot), Carmel, Monterey Co., California;
USNM
E3831 (
2 in
lot), Monterey Bay, California;
USNM
E3832 (
2 in
lot), Strait of Juan de Fuca, Washington;
USNM
E21533, San Nicolas Id., California;
USNM
1083885 (
3 in
lot), Puget Sound, Washington;
CASIZ
0 0 8558 Crescent City, California (
1 specimen
in alcohol, likely “variety F” voucher for
Fisher, 1911
:285);
LACM
1959-281.12 (
1 specimen
), Monterey Co., California, intertidal,
36°32’N
121°56’W
;
LACM
1928-3.1, Pacific Grove, California, intertidal. We have additionally examined images of seastars from the vicinity of Sitka, Alaska (
Fig. 3
C) and from Cape Arago, Oregon (
Fig. 3
D) that appear to be the same species.
Diagnosis.
Small in size; rays stout and short (R/r less than 5), aboral pseudopaxillae well-spaced, bearing up to 50 short spines with fenestrated, crystalline, smooth-sided shafts tipped by up to 10 heavy sharp points that do not noticeably splay. Aboral color in life usually a mottled pattern of ochre, brown, gray, rust-red, or yellow; oral color yellow to cream. Gonopores orally-directed, eggs non-buoyant, development benthic and brooded.
Description.
Holotype
(
Figs. 3
B, 4B, 5D, 5F), collected by RRS and MFS on
March 30, 2005
, is a medium-sized specimen, in life R =
19.7 mm
, r =
6.4 mm
. Madreporal ray
6.8 mm
wide at base. Living aboral colors are ochre mottled with red-brown spots on every ray, orange-red around the anus extending toward one interradius, and orange at the ray tips (
Figs. 3
B). Madreporite cream yellow. Oral color orange yellow. A large aboral pseudopaxilla with 25 spines (
Fig. 4B
,
5
D, 5F).
Most specimens have 5 rays; 4- or 6-rayed individuals are rare. The rays taper rather evenly from base to tip but are short and stout. Among
34 specimens
from the San Juan Archipelago (the largest having R =
29.4 mm
and r =
6.3 mm
and the smallest having R =
4.1 mm
and r =
1.4 mm
), R/r varied from 1.8 to 4.7, average 3.0. Aboral color usually mottled, the mix may include yellow, ochre, brown, rust-red and gray, all colors not always present on each individual (southern specimens show a greater range of mottling); oral color cream to orange yellow. Madreporite distinct; madreporal spines grouped at the periphery and in single rows across the center and the same size as the aboral pseudopaxillar spines. Aboral pseudopaxillae well-spaced and separated by recessed tissue and papular areas containing 1 to 4 papulae, the maximum number increasing with body size. Aboral pseudopaxillae oval or irregularly oblong on the disc and oval to crescentic on the rays consisting of tissue-covered spines in groups of 2 to 50, usually 12 to 45, the number increasing with body size.
Aboral spines are short and stout and terminate in multiple short sharp points that do not markedly splay and so are directed more or less distally (
Figs. 5B, 5
D, 5F), which can be obscured by tissue in living or airdried (
Fig. 5
G) specimens. On the rays, two marginal and one ventrolateral series of pseudopaxillae form regular and obvious rows flanking the ambulacral plates that edge the ambulacral furrow. Near the ray base, a small triangle of interradial pseudopaxillae is enclosed between the superomarginal series, as it descends from the aboral disc to lie along the ray side, and the inferomarginal series. Both the supero- and inferomarginal pseudopaxillae are slightly larger than the aboral pseudopaxillae and extend to the ray tip in 1:1 correspondence with the ambulacral plates. The ventrolateral pseudopaxillae are small and this series extends half to three-fourths of the length of the ray (
Fig. 1
B, 4C). Among specimens with R ranging from 9.0 to
29.4 mm
, the ratio of ventrolateral to adambulacral pseudopaxillae (V/A, counted from mouth to ray tip) ranged from 0.34 to 0.79, averaging 0.62 (N = 53;
holotype
V/A = 0.74).
A regular series of single papulae occurs between the inferomarginal and ventrolateral pseudopaxillae and single papulae between some ventrolateral and adambulacral pseudopaxillae.
FIGURE 3.
Living coloration. A.
Henricia leviuscula
voucher USNM 1116587. B.
Henricia pumila
n. sp.
holotype USNM1116585. A whole seastar, aboral and oral views, scale bar = 1 cm. Note the small size, short rays in relation to disc diameter. B–C. ray and disc, scale bar = 1 cm. B. aboral and oral views. On aboral surface note small, crescentic pseudopaxillae and relatively larger papular areas. On oral surface note elongated adambulacral plates with few spines, ventrolateral plates extending only four-fifths the ray length, and elongated inferomarginal and superomarginal plates (the latter not entirely in view). C. Color in field for likely
H. pumila
from near Sitka, Alaska (image by A. Baldwin). D. Color in field for likely
H. pumila
from Cape Arago, Oregon (image by J. Goddard).
FIGURE 4.
A–B. Detail of aboral surface of single ray. A.
Henricia leviuscula
voucher USNM 1116587 (see also Figs. 3A, 5C, 5E). B.
H. pumila
n. sp.
holotype. C. Oral surface of single ray,
H. pumila
n. sp.
USNM 1116586 paratype. Note the ventrolateral series of plates/spines extends unusually far in this individual (contrast with Fig. 1B). A–B same scale bar = 4 mm. C scale bar = 4 mm. Images A–B by A. Draeger.
Near the base of the ray, superomarginal pseudopaxillae have 12–37 spines each; inferomarginals, 10–32; and ventrolaterals, 5–20. Number of spines per pseudopaxilla generally increases with body size. Each adambulacral plate bears one thin, curved deep-furrow spine and 6–14, usually no more than 10, large, slightly curved, columnar spines in one row that becomes double then triple farthest from the ambulacral furrow. The large spines nearest the furrow are blunt-ended with finely spinous surfaces, the tips sometimes slightly flattened but not spatulate; those farther from the furrow are smaller and more coarsely spinous with sharp terminal points but not radiating thorns. On the
holotype
, the largest adambulacral spine is about 500 µm long and the points at the tip span 160–200 µm.
Distribution.
H. pumila
is the only small, brooding species of this genus presently known in Puget Sound and the San Juan Archipelago, Washington. It seems to be a widespread Pacific Coast shallow-water coastal species. In the north, it occurs in southern British
Columbia
,
Canada
and probably ranges further north to Sitka, Alaska,
USA
. The southern-most record is from areas of cold-water upwelling at Arbolitos, south of Punta Banda, Baja California,
Mexico
, but the species appears to skip over southern California, with the nextmost southern record near Pismo Beach, California, north of Pt. Conception. Despite the lack of records from southern California, it might be present in the Channel Islands or in unexplored subtidal areas.
FIGURE 5.
A–B SEM images of aboral spines, scale bar = 100µm. A.
Henricia leviuscula
(MFS 149) spines with fenestrated smooth-sided shafts tipped with splayed sharp points. B.
Henricia pumila
,
n. sp.
(MFS 109 paratype) spines with fenestrated smooth-sided shafts tipped with sharp points that do not splay. C–G close-ups of aboral pseudopaxillae. C, E.
H
.
leviuscula
USNM 1116587. D,F.
H
.
pumila
n. sp.
holotype. G.
H
.
pumila
n. sp.
USNM 1116586 paratype, fixed in formalin and air-dried. Note tissue obscuring spine tips.
Reproduction.
We have assumed sexes are separate but have not dissected gonads to thoroughly search for evidence of hermaphroditic tissues, as is known for some small brooding marine invertebrates (e.g.,
Strathmann
et al.
, 1984
;
Eernisse, 1988
;
Colgan
et al.
, 2005
;
Keever and Hart, 2008
). Eggs are shed through gonopores on the oral side of the disc edge between rays (
Chia, 1966
;
Hopkins, 1967
), in contrast to their aboral position in
H. leviuscula
and other free-spawning species. Eggs about 1144 µm diameter (
Strathmann
et al.
, 2002
) are neither buoyant nor sticky when shed and are held beneath the maternal body with the rays spiraled, pinwheel fashion, around a slightly elevated disc (R. Strathmann, unpubl. observ.). Embyos are brooded under the disc and emerge as crawl-away juveniles. Brooding in rocky low intertidal areas of the San Juan Archipelago and central California has been seen in January to April. The Atlantic deep-water congener,
Henricia lisa
, has recently been shown to be a facultative brooder (
Mercier and Hamel, 2008
) and, although the mode of brooding differs, the same possibility exists for
H. pumila
and other asteroid species known to brood.
Etymology.
From the Latin for dwarf, the term used by
Fisher (1911)
for the small adult body size of this species.
Remarks.
It is possible that this species is the same as Hubert Lyman Clark’s (1901) stout-rayed variety
Cribrella
(=
Henricia
)
laeviuscula
[sic] variety
crassa
from Puget Sound. Clark was an affiliate of Olivet College, Olivet, MI, about the time he described this variety by only its body size and ray shape. The museum at Olivet College was unfortunately destroyed by fire in 1968, and most of the records were lost (Marie Davis to Robert Woollacott, pers. comm.). We have not found
types
for Clark’s nominal variety in museums where it seemed plausible that he might have deposited material, including the Museum of Comparative Zoology at Harvard University (where Clark was later curator of echinoderms from
1910 to 1946
) or the American Museum of Natural History (Clark reported that the specimens were collected in Puget Sound by a group from
Columbia
University, and Columbia’s museum later became part of the AMNH collections). A partially dissected dried specimen was found at Harvard’s MCZ; its only label is clearly not the original because it reads “
Henricia laeviuscula crassa
(Clark) Locality
: Puget Sound, Washington” (MCZ 1046). The morphology of this specimen corresponds to
H. pumila
but the entries for it in the accession catalogue and a 1930s list of specimens do not give collection information or an accession date. Given the brevity of the description and the lack of verifiable
type
material, we consider Clark’s varietal name,
crassa
, to be a
nomen dubium
, as similarly concluded by
Fisher (1911
,
1930
) and
Verrill (1914)
.
Fisher’s (1911) specimens of the small form that he called
H. leviuscula
variety F were collected from the vicinities of Monterey, San Francisco, and Crescent City in California and the Straits of [Juan de] Fuca and Puget Sound in Washington. Although Fisher knew some of these to be brooders, and described the brooding posture as arched, his specimens (see also
Kozloff, 1996
;
Mah, 2007
) may have included more than the one species we describe here as
H. pumila
.
There is at least one other at least partly co-occurring, and probably undescribed, small-bodied species from British
Columbia
south to northern Baja California. Yet another species is usually small and is so far known from the subtidal of central and southern California (D. J. Eernisse and M. Strathmann, in prep.). Both of these species have finer and more numerous spines per plate. Nothing is yet known of their life history traits so the possibility remains that one or both might be brooders. Other
Henricia
species are known to be brooders but differ in their distribution and morphology.
H. tumida
Verrill 1909
grows larger and has broader, thicker arms and is reported from the Aleutians Islands, Alaska, and the Bering Sea. It was discussed as
H. sanguinolenta eschrichtii
or
H. tumida
by
Fisher (1911
,
1930
), and as
H. tumida
or
H. tumida borealis
, or possibly as
H. arctica
,
by
Verrill (1909
,
1914
).
Djakonov (1950: 85–86)
later described and illustrated specimens of
H. tumida
,
H. tumida borealis
,
and a similar smaller species,
H. arctica
, from the Sea of Okhotsk and the Bering Sea. He reported that
H. arctica
is also found in the Litke Strait and off Cape Lisburne, Alaska. It is not known if
H. arctica
is a brooding species. Small brooding species have been reported from
Japan
, and the development of one,
H. nipponica
, has been described (
Komatsu & Tayayama 1980
). We have not studied
H. nipponica
but believe it unlikely to be the same as
H. pumila
because nothing resembling
H. pumila
is yet known from the intervening Aleutian Islands. We have seen little genetic evidence of marine species with such a disjunct eastern and western Pacific distribution. Thus, we speculate that any brooding
Henricia
in the northwestern Pacific might be closely related to, but not conspecific with,
H. pumila
. An extension of the study of small brooding species of
Henricia
to the far northern and northwestern Pacific is still needed.