New taxa and taxonomic revisions to the Poraniidae (Valvatacea; Asteroidea) with Comments on Feeding Biology
Author
Mah, Christopher L.
Author
Foltz, David W.
text
Zootaxa
2014
3795
3
327
372
journal article
45800
10.11646/zootaxa.3795.3.7
f0614c34-e456-4231-a5c0-281479168dac
1175-5326
252134
77AB3EAA-DA13-4C8D-885D-EB9F5F14DE34
Glabraster
A.H. Clark 1916
Figure 5
A–F
Glabraster
A.H. Clark 1916
: 122
Type
species:
Porania magellanica
Studer 1876
(a synoym of
Porania antarctica
Smith 1876
)
Diagnosis.
Body weakly pentagonal to strongly stellate (R/r= 1.51–2.85). Arms, triangular in shape, varying from well-developed and elongate, contiguous with body to short and emerging abruptly from well-developed disk. Body generally tumescent. Prominent skin overlying abactinal, marginal and actinal surfaces. Plate outlines obscured in wet specimens. Abactinal plates forming widely-spaced, reticulate pattern. Skin present between widely reticulate plates bearing small ossicles among many of the open spaces. Spines present or absent on abactinal plates. When present, spines are prominent and present individually on each plate. Spines, short with thorn-like or blunt tips tend to be most prominent on plates where confluences of bands are present but they are also present in several individuals on individual abactinal bands. Marginal plates imbricate, differing in size. Superomarginals
3x–4x
larger than inferomarginals.
Superomarginal plates, polylobate in shape, plate boundaries obscured by thickened tissue in wet specimens. Superomarginals with no spines, but spinelets variably present. Inferomarginal plates, irregularly polygonal, rounded and pinch out two to four plates before terminus in larger specimens but form nearly complete series in smaller individuals (R>
1.5 cm
). Inferomarginals form actinolateral fringe, with one or two flattened spatulate spines present on each plate.
Actinal plates, imbricate, forming transverse series between adambulacrals, plates skin covered, otherwise surficial accessories absent in most (i.e., no granules, no spinelets, etc.). Furrow spine (s) pointed, narrow, sheathed in skin, variably one or two, set within the furrow. Subambulacral spines, one or two, paddle shaped, larger than furrow spines (approximately twice as thick) with blunt tips. Subambulacral tips vary from more widely flattened to strongly cuved (u-shaped in cross section).
Taxonomic comments.
Our molecular results (
Fig. 1
) support separation of the
Antarctic
Porania antarctica
from the Arctic/subArctic
Porania pulvillus
. This is consistent with several significant morphological differences between the two species, which has historically been perceived as interspecific variation (e.g.,
Clark and Downey 1992
).
A.H. Clark (1916)
created
Glabraster
to accommodate the southern hemisphere
Porania antarctica
Smith 1876
and
Porania magellanica
Studer 1876
(later synonymized). However, according to
A.M. Clark (1993: 229)
,
Glabraster
was synonymized by
Fisher (1940)
and the name was not used for other citations of “
Porania
”
antarctica
in the literature [e.g.,
Koehler (1920)
]. There was apparently no objection to its use in the literature prior to Fisher’s synonymy. The diagnosis of
Glabraster
is consistent with morphological characters separating it from the northern
Porania
providing us with a basis for reinstating it herein.
Porania pulvillus
possesses an abactinal skeleton composed of tightly reticulate, semi-imbricate, plates when compared against
Glabraster
, which has a well-defined widely spaced reticulate abactinal skeleton (
Fig. 5
A–F).
Glabraster antarctica
also has adambulacral furrow spines with flattened and blunt tips (
Fig. 5
B), as opposed to those
P. pulvillus
which are blunt and pointed, but round/oval in cross section, sometimes with cone-like shape (
Fig. 6
B)
The separation between
Porania
and
Glabraster
implies that characters which have been historically been used as support for the two species within a single genus should be attributed either to plesiomorphy (within the
Poraniidae
), such as thick skin, smooth skin, distinctive primary plates, or alternatively to convergence (e.g., ventrolateral flange formed by the inferomarginal plates). Both taxa occur in cold-water, low-latitude settings, which provides a plausible setting for similar environmental influence that could result in parallel morphological expression.