New species and occurrence records of Japanese Solasteridae and Ganeriidae including a new species of Paralophaster from the North Pacific with an overview of Hyalinothrix
Author
Mah, Christopher L.
Author
Fujita, Toshihiko
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-03-10
4750
1
67
100
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4750.1.4
ff300143-3581-4909-ae95-8dec768fe27a
1175-5326
3702847
CF37CEA8-E156-48A6-8A28-C94A294A75DF
SOLASTERIDAE Viguier 1878
Multi-armed solasterid genera such as
Crossaster
and
Solaster
occupy important ecological roles as predators (see
Mauzey
et al
. 1968
;
Carlson & Pfister 1999
; among others) and display importance in influencing community structure (e.g., Himmelman & Dutil 1991). Some five-rayed solasterids, such as those in the genus
Lophaster
are also predators (e.g., Duncan &
Sladen 1889
; Mah pers. obs.) but are not as well understood. Solasterids include a total of 52 species in ten genera, which occur primarily in cold to temperate water habitats ranging from intertidal to abyssal (>
3000 m
) depths. The
Solasteridae
includes nine living genera in addition to the Jurassic
Brachisolaster
. Fisher (1911) provided one of the last comprehensive keys to the genera within the
Solasteridae
.
In the Japanese region, initial accounts of Japanese solasterids included those of
Sladen (1889)
and Fisher (1911).
Hayashi (1939
,
1940
) provided comprehensive descriptions and identification keys to
Solaster
and
Crossaster
species from Japanese waters. Hayashi (1973) described a new species,
Lophaster asiaticus
, which was also the first account of
Lophaster
from Japanese waters. Imaoka
et al
. (1991) was the first to identify
Lophaster furcilliger
Fisher, 1905
, a species previously known from the Pacific coast of North America and the Aleutians, from the
Japan
Sea. More recently
Kogure & Kaneko (2010)
described
Seriaster regularis
from
Okinawa
and provided a key to Japanese solasterids (in Japanese).
Comprehensive molecular phylogenetic treatments of the
Solasteridae
have not yet been undertaken, but both the two- and three-gene trees in
Mah & Foltz (2011)
support five-rayed forms, such as
Lophaster
and
Paralophaster
, as relatively relative to multi-rayed forms such as the more derived
Crossaster
and
Solaster
. Although the position of the “traditional”
Ganeriidae
(sensu
Spencer & Wright 1966
) is not completely understood, its position on proximal locations on the broader clade are relevant to the
Solasteridae
as potential sister taxa given shared synapomorphies between some ganeriids and basal solasterids.
Diagnosis.
Body stellate, disk thick, well defined arms, 5 to 15, round in cross-section. Abactinal surface composed of lobate plates in irregular reticulum, displaying variably close to wide articulation with single to large papular expression. Plates with variable accessories ranging from spines to paxillae. Marginal plates present in two series (following
Blake 1978
), but one or both series show variable degrees of expression resembling abactinal plates or paxillae. Actinal plates restricted to disk in most taxa. Adambulacral plates wing-like, forming transverse series with interadambulacdral plate spaces filled with tissue. Adambulacral plate surface with variable spine expression projecting into furrow. Subambulacral spination variably expressed as individual spines, in tufts or as combs.