Taxonomy of the sea stars (Echinodermata: Asteroidea) from Bahia State, including ontogenetic variation and an illustrated key to the Brazilian species
Author
Cunha, Rosana
0000-0002-0858-0041
rosana.fcunha@alumni.usp.br
Author
Martins, Luciana
0000-0002-0858-0041
rosana.fcunha@alumni.usp.br
Author
Menegola, Carla
0000-0002-4913-366X
carla.menegola@gmail.com
Author
Souto, Camilla
0000-0002-0858-0041
rosana.fcunha@alumni.usp.br
text
Zootaxa
2021
2021-04-13
4955
1
1
78
journal article
7258
10.11646/zootaxa.4955.1.1
154fa04a-d90d-401d-8d8f-52467a275fce
1175-5326
4691078
E800A72A-C56A-492C-9EE6-FA4F8277DE31
Genus
Othilia
Gray, 1840
Type
species.
Othilia echinophora
(
Lamarck, 1816
)
(
type
by subsequent designation by
Fisher, 1911
).
Remarks.
Previously demoted as a subgenus of
Echinaster
by
Clark & Tortonese (1986)
because of the lack of exclusive morphological characters (see
Clark & Downey [1992]
for a thorough revision), the re-erection of the genus
Othilia
is supported by morphological (
Fontanella & Hopkins 2003
) and molecular evidence (Lopes
et al.
2016). These phylogenies have shown that
Othilia
is a monophyletic group and that the genus
Echinaster
is more closely related to
Henricia
than to
Othilia
.
Fontanella & Hopkins (2003)
found five synapomorphies supporting the genus
Othilia
, but unfortunately these were not listed in their paper. A.M.
Clark (1987)
distinguished
Echinaster
from
Othilia
using two diagnostic characters: the arrangement of the dorsolateral plates, which are organized into an irregular reticulum in
Echinaster
and a regular reticulum in
Othilia
; and the presence of actinal plates between the inferomarginal and adambulacral plates in
Echinaster
. However, Lopes
et al.
(2016) mentioned that, based on the literature,
E
.
callosus
Marenzeller, 1895
and
E
.
luzonicus
(
Gray, 1840
)
do not have actinal plates.
Three species of
Othilia
have been reported for the Brazilian coast:
O. brasiliensis
,
O. echinophora
and
O. guyanensis
.
Species of the genus
Othilia
are commercially exploited in
Rio de Janeiro
and
Bahia
as souvenirs and for the aquarium trade, and they are also used for medicinal (treatment of asthma and alcoholism) and religious purposes (
Nobre & Campos-Creasey 2000
;
Alves
et al
. 2009
;
Alves & Dias 2010
;
Martins
et al
. 2012
[as
Echinaster guyanensis
]).