The East Pacific / South Pacific Boundary: New taxa and occurrences from Rapa Nui (Easter Island), New Caledonia and adjacent regions
Author
Mah, Christopher L.
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-06-02
4980
3
401
450
journal article
5948
10.11646/zootaxa.4980.3.1
f36e1c1f-1bfa-4fbc-b2dd-5edf6c7173af
1175-5326
4896889
F1FCA8AC-A984-4547-8A05-F1993BDAEE7C
Astroglypha
n. gen.
Etymology.
The genus is composed of the Greek “
Astron
” for star and the Greek “glypho” for “carved or engraved” alluding to the very sculpted appearance of both species.
Diagnosis.
Body petaloid with short, blunt, arms. Disk and arm ossicles enlarged, convex and blocky forming three distinct series with carinal and superomarginal plates visible along each arm. Disk plates enlarged and blocky. Surface covered by continuous granulation. Adambulacral spines one or two. Large flattened bullet-shaped subambulacral spine present.
Type
species.
Tamaria pyramidata
Mah
n. sp.
Taxonomic Comments.
Tamaria passiflora
and the new species of
Astroglypha
n. gen.
fall outside the historical
Tamaria
concept as outlined by H.L.
Clark (1921)
and are herein assigned to the new genus
Astroglypha
. The
Ophidiasteridae
has recently undergone re-evaluation following molecular data (
Mah & Foltz 2011
) showing genera such as
Fromia
and
Neoferdina
to be members of the
Goniasteridae
.
Mah (2017)
examined the paraphyletic
Ophidiasteridae
and attempted to establish morphological boundaries for ophidiasterid-like
Goniasteridae
and more typological
Ophidiasteridae
, such as
Ophidiaster
or
Linckia
.
Tamaria
has been historically defined on the basis of six serial papular rows contingent on the absence of actinal papulae, as compared with
Ophidiaster
(H.L.
Clark, 1921
)
. However, in spite of the difference in papular rows,
Tamaria
, in Clark’s original (1921) definition shares more characters with more typological ophidiasterids, such as
Ophidiaster
(
sensu
Mah 2017
)
, such as the cylindrical arms, small disk and marginal and abactinal plate arrangement.
Tamaria passiflora
was described by
Downey (1971)
with four papular rows as well as a more strongly developed skeleton, petaloid-shaped, shorter arms and a more weakly stellate body (R/r = approximately 3.0–4.0 versus 4.0–7.0 in spp. more similar to the
type
species) and large blocky marginal and disk ossicles. These features are inconsistent with characters identifying the traditional
Tamaria
concept as outlined by H.L.
Clark (1921)
. Thus, it is argued that
Tamaria passiflora
and the species described herein should be separated as part of the new genus,
Astroglypha
.
Clark & Downey (1992: 284)
further discussed this species’ unusual morphology and agreed that “perhaps deserves to be removed to a new genus, on the basis of its single row of large abactinal plates, its irregular arrangement of actinal plates, two series of subambulacral spines, minute terminal plates and short, heavy petaloid arms.”
Astroglypha
n. gen.
within the
Ophidiasteridae
.
Astroglypha
n. gen.
is provisionally placed within the
Ophidiasteridae
but further testing of affinities is encouraged. Most of the genera included in the
Ophidiasteridae
display characters which strongly support the more traditional ophidiasterid morphology.
Hacelia
,
Heteronardoa
,
Linckia
,
Ophidiaster
, and
Tamaria
display characters with cylindrical arms, small disk, granular coverings and show abactinal and marginal plates which are identical in appearance.
The newly described
Astroglypha
lacks morphological characters seen in other
Ophidiasteridae
, including having shorter arms, blockier abactinal and marginal plates and arms which are more angular in shape and angular rather than round in cross-section. However, marginal and abactinal plates are similar in appearance and the surface is covered by granules as is the case in other ophidiasterids. Thus, based on these characters,
Astroglypha
n. gen.
is retained within the
Ophidiasteridae
. However, the morphology is otherwise highly divergent from the other known genera within the family with the possible exception of
Bunaster
, which displays similarly arranged abactinal and marginal plates (
Marsh 1999
).
Blake (2018: 60)
illustrated skeletal similarities between
Astroglypha
(formerly
Tamaria
)
passiflora
and Paleozoic
Asteroidea
, notably the Ordovician
Hudsonaster
and
Macroporaster
. In situ
observation of
Astroglypha passiflora
in the tropical Atlantic (
Fig. 8F
) suggest this morphology could be associated with predation on sponges.