The genera and species of Comatulidae (Comatulida: Crinoidea): taxonomic revisions and a molecular and morphological guide
Author
Summers, Mindi M.
Author
Messing, Charles G.
Author
Rouse, Greg W.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4268
2
151
190
journal article
33045
10.11646/zootaxa.4268.2.1
e114acb7-3683-4094-a53f-c9bc7ed84353
1175-5326
580173
0742D287-B82C-4014-A6AC-C357F259D5D7
Comaster
L. Agassiz, 1836
Table 1
,
Figs. 8–9
Type species.
Alecto multifida
Müller, 1841
.
Other included taxa (2).
Actinometra schlegelii
Carpenter, 1881
;
Comaster audax
Rowe, Hoggett, Birtles & Vail, 1986
.
Diagnosis.
Mouth excentric in fully developed individuals; up to 180 arms; centrodorsal small, discoidal or pentagonal; cirri absent or present; aboral surface with irregular plates between bases of adjacent rays; IBr2 united by synarthry; IIBr and beyond 2 or 4(3+4), usually with IIIBr of 2 ossicles exteriorly and 4(3+4) interiorly; first syzygy on undivided arms always 3+4; distal intersyzygial interval 4; distalmost pinnule comb at least P2 (usually P3–P8), sometimes at intervals to P14; combs arising gradually and tapering to a sharp point distally; pinnules on brachitaxes and sometimes P1 with comb of single, nonconfluent teeth; combs on brachial pinnules of paired, confluent, erect, more or less equal-sized and well separated teeth; pairs sometimes joined to form a transverse bar (
Fig. 8
D, M). Paired comb teeth may be absent on juvenile specimens (10–13 arms).
Distribution.
Tropical Indo-western Pacific from northern
Australia
(Perth, WA, to Solitary Is., NSW), west to the
Maldives
, east to
Fiji
, and north to Sagami Bay,
Japan
. Depth range:
2–
183 m
. All but a very few records are from depths shallower than
50 m
.
Molecular results.
Specimens identified as
Comaster nobilis
and
C. schlegelii
are less than 1.6% divergent in uncorrected distances of COI. As a clade, specimens of
nobilis
/
schlegelii
were at least 4% divergent in uncorrected distances of COI from
C. audax
(
Fig. 9
). A more comprehensive molecular and morphological analysis of
Comaster
is in preparation (Owen
et. al. in prep.)
Remarks.
Species of
Comaster
are most easily distinguished from other comatulids by the irregular plates between the bases of adjacent rays, which give the aboral surface a solid, paved appearance. Because specimens identifiable as
C. nobilis
or
C. schlegelii
exhibit such minimal sequence divergence, we reinstate the former as a junior synonym of the latter, in agreement with AH
Clark (1911b
,
1911c
,
1912b
,
1931
). Nevertheless, substantial morphological variation exists. Smaller
C. schlegelii
with numerous cirri are easily distinguished from larger cooccurring “
C. nobilis
” on the Great Barrier Reef. The distinction may be ontogenetic, although accompanied by distinct and consistent color pattern differences. Specimens attributed to “
C. nobilis
” lose cirri with growth. At Raja Ampat,
Indonesia
,
C. schlegelii
and “
C. nobilis
” with similar centrodorsal diameters have ~20 versus 1 (plus a few tiny buds) cirri, respectively, whereas a smaller “
C. nobilis
” with the same color pattern as the large specimen has ~20 cirri. Specimens attributed to
C. schlegelii
from
Micronesia
, where “
C. nobilis
” has not been collected, retain well-developed cirri, reach a larger size, and perch in the open instead of nestling in crevices as
C. schlegelii
typically does elsewhere (
Messing 1998b
).