Shallow-water brittle stars (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) from Araçá Bay (Southeastern Brazil), with spatial distribution considerations
Author
Alitto, Renata A. S.
Author
Bueno, Maristela L.
Author
Guilherme, Pablo D. B.
Author
Domenico, Maikon Di
Author
Christensen, Ana Beardsley
Author
Borges, Michela
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-04-06
4405
1
1
66
journal article
30325
10.11646/zootaxa.4405.1.1
55df350b-41c6-4f2e-9a18-c0be6d47498b
1175-5326
3097993
D33BF380-5AF7-4645-86C7-9981C528EAF0
Genus
Ophiothela
Verrill, 1867
Type taxon.
Ophiothela mirabilis
Verrill, 1867
originally described as
Ophiothrix
(Ophiothela) mirabilis
.
Diagnosis.
Radial shields very large, covering most of the disc. Ventral side of arms and disc covered by skin, usually obscuring the arm plates and scales. Dorsal arm plates covered by granules. Arm spines mostly turned downward, armed with thorns or hooks (
Verrill 1867
).
Comments.
In the original description,
Verrill (1867)
mentions that the adoral shields are all in contact, forming a continuous ring around the mouth. This feature was not used here for two reasons: i) the ventral side of the disc may be covered with a skin, obscuring the oral and adoral shields, making them difficult to see, and ii) some specimens did not have skin covering the ventral disc surface, exposing ventral arm plates between the adoral shields radially, contradicting the original description. This character needs revision.
Ophiothela
differs from
Ophiothrix
in having the arms distinctly covered with a membranous skin, dorsal surface with granules (
Verrill 1867
), and arms more flexible in the vertical plane (
Clark 1966
).
Ophiothela
was confined to Pacific waters (
Clark 1976b
), but recently introduced populations have been described in the Atlantic (
Hendler
et al
. 2012
). Its presence has changed the appearance and ecology of coral reefs as the species is often associated with gorgonians and sponges (
James 1995
;
Goh
et al
. 1999
;
Hendler
et al
. 2012
). The implications of this association are still unclear due to the limited number of studies. One laboratory based study suggests that the coral might gain some benefit from this association through the removal of sediment build-up due brittle star movement (
Sneli 1985
).
Ophiothela
presently includes six species (
Stöhr
et al
. 2016
) with one recorded from
Brazil
(
Barboza & Borges 2012
):
Ophiothela danae
Verril, 1867
. However, another species,
O. mirabilis
, was recorded by
Hendler
et al
. (2012)
and
Mantelatto
et al
. (2016)
and
O.
cf.
mirabilis
by
Alitto
et al
. (2016)
.