Biogeography and taxonomy of Ophiuroidea (Echinodermata) from the Îles Saint- Paul and Amsterdam in the southern Indian Ocean
Author
O’Hara, Timothy D.
Museums Victoria, GPO Box 666 E, Melbourne, 3001, AUSTRALIA,
Author
Thuy, Ben
Natural History Museum of Luxembourg, 24 Rue Münster, 2160 Luxembourg
text
Zootaxa
2022
2022-03-31
5124
1
1
49
journal article
53164
10.11646/zootaxa.5124.1.1
9666d599-2c7d-4a52-bce2-a8794f03265b
1175-5326
6404674
C015F8CB-799B-4A92-90AE-02B4C576089E
Genus
Ophiosabine
gen. nov.
http://zoobank.org/
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:act:
19CBDBB0-7DF5-46C7-9C62-592BD6EC0A80
Diagnosis.
Disc covered in thin scales and armoured with stout thorny spines, smooth spines or granules; radial shields mostly obscured, only evident by a shallow furrow and small exposed distal section on the disc; oral shields 1–3 times longer than wide, pentagonal to square, with an obtuse proximal angle or straight proximal margin and rounded to square distal margin; adoral shields small, usually situated proximal to the oral shields; 3–5 spiniform oral papillae, the outer one usually widened, suboral papillae can be present around the second oral tentacle pore; DAPs triangular to fan-shaped, separate, sometimes edged with small thorns; VAPs with an obtuse angle proximally, and an uplifted rounded distal edge, can be glassy and striated; 6–10 long hollow cylindrical arm spines, rounded at tip, finely denticulate; tentacle pores small, one large oval to pointed tentacle scale on most pores, sometimes two on first arm segment.
Included species
.
Ophiacantha rosea
Lyman, 1878b
(
type
species);
Ophiacantha anomala
Sars, 1872
;
Ophiacantha aristata
Koehler, 1896b
;
Ophiacantha cuspidata
Lyman, 1878b
;
Ophiacantha densispina
Mortensen, 1936
;
Ophiacantha nodosa
Lyman, 1878b
;
Ophiacantha notata
Koehler, 1906
;
Ophiacantha parcita
Koehler, 1906
;
Ophiacantha pentactis
Mortensen, 1936
;
Ophiacantha vivipara
Ljungman, 1871
;
Ophiacantha wolfarntzi
Martín-Ledo
et al.
, 2013
.
Remarks
. The molecular phylogenies presented in
O’Hara
et al.
(2017)
and
Christodoulou
et al.
(2019)
show that the genus
Ophiacantha
Müller & Troschel, 1842
, is polyphyletic, with some species even occurring in the
Ophiotomidae
(see
O. spectabilis
below). Amongst the many nominal
Ophiacantha
species
that are not closely related to the
type
species
O. bidentata
(
Bruzelius 1805
)
, there is a monophyletic clade with a coherent morphology that contains the species
O. rosea
and
O. vivipara
that is here named as a new genus
Ophiosabine
. The most prominent feature is the unusual oral shield that usually is longer than wide and can be almost rectangular in some species (e.g.,
O. rosea
) and the small interradially-contiguous adoral shields that are placed proximal to the oral shields.
There is DNA evidence that, as well as
O. rosea
and
O. vivipara
, this genus includes the Southern Ocean
O. pentactis
,
O. densispina
and
O. wolfarntzi
, as well as the Atlantic species
O. anomala
,
O. cuspidata
,
O. aristata
(
Christodoulou
et al.
2019
;
Martín-Ledo
et al.
2013
;
O’Hara
et al.
2013
). In addition, the Atlantic species
O. nodosa
,
O. notata
and
O. parcita
share many morphological features of the group. Several taxonomists have noted the similarity of the six-armed
O. nodosa
and
O. anomala
(
Mortensen 1933c
;
Paterson 1985
). However,
Paterson (1985)
found morphological characters that distinguished the two species and the two species differ in depth distribution, with the
holotype
and only known specimen of
O. nodosa
collected from much lower depths (
2789 m
) than is characteristic for
O. anomala
(
141–1200 m
). As well as the typical oral shield,
O. notata
and
O. parcita
share the glassy striated nature of the VAPs that occur in
O. wolfarntzi
.
Several other little-known species are also similar but have been described or figured with certain morphological features that make their assignment to
Ophiosabine
uncertain. The Atlantic species
O. lineata
Koehler, 1896a
and
O. metallacta
H.L.
Clark, 1915
have disc spines in the form of short cylindrical stumps with a rim of thorns.
Ophiomitrella porrecta
Koehler, 1914
from the Straits of Magellan (
636 m
) has a very elongated jaw,
Ophiacantha atopostoma
H.L.
Clark, 1911
from the Bering Sea (
629–681 m
) has round exposed patches on the radial shields, and
O. acanthinotata
H.L.
Clark, 1911
from
Japan
(
309–331 m
) has oral shields that “tend to become triangular”. All these species require further critical examination.
There are also numerous cryptic species in this group which complicate the nomenclature.
Ophiosabine vivpara
consists of three clades in the Southern Ocean (
Brogger & O’Hara 2015
;
O’Hara
et al.
2013
).
Ophiosabine rosea
consists of numerous clades around
Australia
/
New Zealand
and
New Caledonia
(
Christodoulou
et al.
2019
;
O’Hara
et al.
2013
), which may not be the same species as the
type
collected from off
Chile
. COI sequences of
O. densispina
from
South Georgia
(
Martín-Ledo
et al.
2013
) are distinct from those around southern
Australia
(
O’Hara
et al.
2013
). There is a second unnamed species at
South Georgia
closely related to
O. wolfarntzi
(
Martin-Ledo, 2013
)
.
The micromorphology of ophiuroid lateral arm plates has been shown to yield a wealth of characters potentially relevant for taxon diagnoses and phylogenetic analyses (
Martynov 2010
;
Thuy & Stöhr 2011
,
2016
). A recent study suggested that lateral arm plate morphologies among species of the
Ophiacanthidae
are consistent with clades resolved by molecular evidence (
Numberger-Thuy & Thuy 2020
;
O’Hara
et al.
2017
). Although the number of species analysed by
Numberger-Thuy and Thuy (2020)
only reflects a small part of the ophiacanthid spectrum, the study suggests that the lateral arm plates of
Ophiosabine rosea
have a uniquely shaped vertebral articular structure on their inner side. In order to corroborate this preliminary observation and potentially establish the shape of the vertebral articular structure as a diagnosing character of the genus
Ophiosabine
, more species will have to be examined with respect to their lateral arm plate morphology.
There is no available genus-level name for the group.
Verrill (1899b)
created the subgenus
Ophientodia
for
O. cuspidata
,
Ophiacantha scutata
Lyman, 1878a
and
O. pectinula
Verrill, 1899a
(=
echinulata
Lyman, 1878a
) but didn’t designate a
type
species. However, as he only reported examining specimens of
O. scutata
and
echinulata
it seems improbable that he would have intended
O. cuspidata
to be the
type
species. Likewise, he created the subgenus
Ophiectodia
Verrill, 1899b
, without designating a
type
species, which contained
O. enopla
Verrill, 1885
,
O. rosea
and
O. spectabilis
but only listed material he had examined of
O. enopla
. Both of Verrill’s proposed subgenera would now be regarded as polyphyletic assemblages.
Etymology
. Named using the typical “Ophio” prefix of brittle star genera and after our colleague, ophiuroid taxonomist and friend Sabine Stöhr of the Swedish Museum of Natural History. Gender is feminine.