Annotated species list of Ophiuroidea (Echinodermata) from the Persian Gulf and Gulf of Oman, with new records
Author
Fatemi, Yaser
Author
Stöhr, Sabine
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-12-13
4711
1
77
106
journal article
24630
10.11646/zootaxa.4711.1.3
b79b7881-13e6-45d7-bec6-3105c1847cf5
1175-5326
3573466
93D1AB7B-26C2-427D-88A7-5D416E547BE0
Ophiothrix
(
Ophiothrix
)
savignyi
(
Müller & Troschel, 1842
)
Fig. 5
Ophionyx savignyi
Müller & Troschel, 1842: 117
.
Material examined:
Persian Gulf,
Iran
, Bustaneh, intertidal, on gorgonians (
Subergorgia suberosa
(Pallas, 1766)
, hand collected Yaser Fatemi, 30 spms,
4.5 mm
to
7.2 mm
dd [SMNH-178933].
Habitat:
Subtidal rock, subtidal sand, mixed subtidal rock and sand, subtidal mud, Coral reef, Artificial structure, sand tidal flat, rock tidal flat, rock and sand beach,
0–33 m
(
Mortensen 1940
;
Clark & Bowen 1949
;
Price 1981
,
1983
;
Jones 1986
; present study) (
Fig. 2B
).
Persian Gulf and Gulf of
Oman
: Kuwait, Bahrain, Chiruyeh (6), Kish Island (7), Jubail (19), Abu Ali (20), Jinna Island (21), Al Juraid Island (22), Ras Tanura (24), Tarut Bay (25), Dammam Channel (26), Stiffe’s Bank (28), As Saffaniyah (32), Bustaneh (34) (ibid.).
Indian Ocean:
Tanzania
(
Ludwig 1899
), Mascarene Basin and Red Sea (
Clark & Rowe 1971
), Chagos Isl. (
Clark & Taylor 1971
),
Madagascar
(
Cherbonnier & Guille 1978
),
Kenya
(
Humphreys 1981
).
Remarks:
Ophiothrix savignyi
is a smaller species with a disc diameter less than
10 mm
(
Cherbonnier & Guille 1978
) and arms about five times the disc diameter long (
Price 1983
).
Price (1983)
remarked on the extremely variable coloration of this species, and our samples seem to confirm this observation. Live animals collected by the present study are brown, uniform or with lighter spots on the disc and irregular white patches or bands along the arms (
Fig. 5A, F, G
). There is a median line along each arm, which may be pale cream (
Fig. 5G
) or bright red (
Fig. 5A, F
). It is often bordered by two thin dark lines (
Fig. 5E
) but these may be absent, and then the median red line may be wider (
Fig. 5A
). In alcohol, the animals turn blue to dark purple and the red line turns white (
Fig. 5B, D, G, K, L
). They have longer (>
1 mm
), rod-like, slightly serrated spines on the dorsal disc and shorter trifid stumps (<
0.2 mm
) in variable density (
Fig. 5E
). The dorsal arm plates are barely wider than long, rhombic and with a median ridge that extends slightly beyond the distal border.
This is the only species of
Ophiothrix
that has so far been reported from the Persian Gulf and Gulf of
Oman
. It is extremely similar to
Ophiothrix ciliaris
(
Lamarck 1816
)
, of which
Koehler (1922)
figured several specimens (under the younger synonym
Ophiothrix stelligera
Lyman, 1874
) with variable color pattern that showed longitudinal lines on the arms as in
Ophiothrix savignyi
.
Clark (1938)
remarked for
O
.
ciliaris
that the median line is always white on the distal arm in animals with red or dark lines. In our specimens, the lines do not change color along the length of the arms. Both species also share a variable disc covering with predominantly trifid stumps, sometimes mixed with long spines (
Koehler 1922
;
Mortensen 1926
). A distinguishing character may be the shape of the ventral arm plates, which have a strongly concave distal edge in
Ophiothrix savignyi
but are straight in
O
.
ciliaris
(
Clark & Rowe 1971
)
. This is visible in
O
.
ciliaris
on pl. 53, figs 3, 6 and pl. 54, fig.
6 in
Koehler (1922)
and in
Ophiothrix savignyi
on pl. VI fig.
6 in
Cherbonnier & Guille (1978)
, but was not considered an important character by those authors, probably because none of them compared
O
.
ciliaris
to
Ophiothrix savignyi
. Indeed, we have not been able to find a taxonomic study that compared these two species, despite their striking similarity. In addition,
Ophiothrix savignyi
usually has minute thorns on the dorsal arm plates (
Clark & Rowe 1971
;
Guille & Wolff 1984
), which may however be absent (
Price 1983
). Our specimens lack these thorns but have concave ventral arm plates (
Fig. 4C
).
Müller & Troschel (1842)
described
Ophiothrix savignyi
(in genus
Ophionyx
) as having keeled, almost rhombic dorsal arm plates and concave ventral arm plates
Rückenschilder der Arme gekielt, von fast rhombischer Gestalt. Bauchschilder der Arme breiter als lang, am aboralen Rande ausgeschweift, am adoralen abgerundet.
(p. 117). This description concurs with our specimens. The
type
locality of
Ophiothrix savignyi
was given as
Egypt
(
Müller & Troschel 1842
), presumably
Red Sea
, not
Mediterranean Sea
, whereas
Lamarck (1816)
referred
O
.
ciliaris
to
Australia
. Considering the wide geographical distance between both species and the fact that the Indian Ocean specimens have been assigned to
Ophiothrix savignyi
by all previous authors, we place our specimens in that species. It is obvious that a taxonomic revision is needed and morphological characters alone may not provide a satisfying answer.
Attaran-Fariman
et al.
(2016)
reported
O
.
savignyi
from the Gulf of
Oman
at Tis port, but the figured animal lacks long disc spines, has few or no disc stumps, dorsal arm plates that are about twice as wide as long and seem to be rugose. All of these characters and its size of about
15 mm
dd suggest that it is
Macrophiothrix hirsuta cheneyi
instead. Records of
Ophiothrix savignyi
from the Andaman and Nicobar Islands by Sadhukhan
et al
. (2012) are based on a misidentified hexamerous
Ophiothela
, possibly
O
.
danae
(likewise all other records in that publication are based on misidentifications).