A revision of the comatulid genus Stephanometra AH Clark with a rediagnosis of the genus Lamprometra AH Clark (Echinodermata: Crinoidea)
Author
Rankin, Dana L.
Author
Messing, Charles G.
text
Zootaxa
2008
1888
1
35
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.184295
6202d01a-26eb-4e35-b367-5598c060def7
1175-5326
184295
Stephanometra
AH Clark, 1909
Antedon
(part) Lütken, 1874:190 (in
Carpenter, 1879
).
Comatula
(part)
Smith, 1876
:406
.
Himerometra
(part) AH
Clark, 1907
:356
.
Dichrometra
(part) AH
Clark, 1909a
:13
.
Stephanometra
AH
Clark, 1909a
:9
; 1941:407–409.—
Gislén, 1924
:59
, 64, 66, 89, 99, 100, 235.—
Zmarzly, 1985
:352
– 353.—
Chen
et al.
, 1988
:78
.—
Kogo, 1998
:61
–63.
Lamprometra
(part) HL
Clark, 1915b
:104
.—AH
Clark 1941
:472
–475.—
Utinomi & Kogo, 1965
:274
–276.—
Zmarzly, 1985
:352
.—
Chen
et al.
, 1988
:78
.—
Kogo, 1998
:61
–63, 65–67.
Diagnosis
. A genus of
Mariametridae
having the centrodorsal convex discoidal with gently sloping sides, and with cirrus sockets encroaching on aboral pole; brachitaxes well-separated; brachitaxis ossicles bearing rounded adambulacral processes oriented parallel or oblique to longitudinal axis of ossicle and producing characteristically scalloped or knobbed lateral margins; cirrals <40; distal cirrals with aboral ornamentation ranging from prominent spine to slight carination; one or more pairs of oral pinnules with reduced ambulacral groove, flattened articular facets, reduced tissue between pinnulars, conical tip and with LW of middle pinnulars 1.5–4.0; P2 of 8 to 18 pinnulars.
Geographic distribution
. From the Red Sea to
Tanzania
in the west to the
Republic of the Marshall Islands
and
Fiji
in the east, including tropical
Australia
as far south as the Capricorn Channel, Queensland, and as far north as southern
Japan
.
Bathymetric range
. Littoral to
62 m
.
Remarks
. AH
Clark (1941:407)
distinguished
Stephanometra
from other mariametrid genera chiefly on the basis of “one or more of the oral pinnules enlarged, greatly stiffened, sharp pointed, and spinelike…” His diagnosis of the most closely similar genus,
Lamprometra
, referred to its longest stoutest pinnule (P2) as very stout to slender. Unfortunately, his species descriptions included substantial overlap between the two. He referred to P2 of
S. indica
in comparison with other members of S
tephanometra
as “somewhat less enlarged and stiffened, usually more or less strongly recurved distally becoming slender and delicate, though not flagellate” (1941:409). P2 of
Lamprometra palmata palmata
, “though tapering... may be straight and almost spinelike.”
As
a result, AM
Clark (1972)
found it difficult to distinguish
L. palmata
from
S. indica
and thought that the two genera intergraded. She noted that a specimen from Muhlos,
Maldives
, appeared twice in AH
Clark (1941)
, once as
S. indica
(p. 453) and once as
L. palmata
(p. 502). She compared P2 of this specimen, composed of elongated pinnulars, tapering to a fine point and identified as
L. p. palmata
(her
Fig. 10
e), with P2 of the
holotype
of
S. indica
(her
Fig.
10
g) to distinguish flagellate versus spine-like forms. However, the Mulhos specimen is actually a much smaller specimen of
S. indica
than the
holotype
, which bears the third largest P
2 in
the current study. Figure 1 more clearly illustrates the difference between “stiff and spinelike” (Figs. 1b–d) and “flagellate” (Figs. 1e–g).
After noting the unreliability of the pinnules as a diagnostic character, AM
Clark (1972)
suggested that the lateral adambulacral margins of the brachitaxes ossicles might distinguish the two genera:
Stephanometra
had lateral processes, while
Lamprometra
tended to have smooth margins. AH
Clark (1941:407)
described the brachitaxes of
Stephanometra
as well separated, with component ossicles bearing rounded ventrolateral (=adambulacral) extensions. Those of
Lamprometra
were typically in close lateral contact and composed of flat-sided ossicles (or, rarely, just in contact with sides slightly or not at all flattened). According to AM
Clark (1972)
, the lateral adambulacral margins in
Lamprometra
had a straight continuous edge and were blunter than those in
Stephanometra
, in which flanged margins rounded off at each end produced a scalloped appearance. However, she also noted specimens in which these margins were slightly scalloped as in
Stephanometra
, while P2 had a flagellate tip as in
Lamprometra
.
She concluded that, because
Stephanometra
tended to integrate with
L. palmata
, it should be synonymized with
Lamprometra
, together with
Liparometra
and
Dichrometra
.
The current study reveals that, while specimens of both genera may bear robust, straight oral pinnules, several additional features consistently distinguish the two. In
Stephanometra
, the enlarged oral pinnules bear middle pinnulars chiefly 2–3 times longer than wide. The tight articulations between these ossicles, characterized by flattened, often almost smooth facets joined by reduced tissue, generate the stiffness and styliform appearance (Fig. 2a–c, 3a, c). The terminal pinnular is short and conical (Fig. 2d). Scallop-like processes along the lateral adambulacral margins of the brachitaxes orient obliquely and may produce elongated knobs proximolaterally on the axils (Fig. 3b, e, f, 4a). In addition, the centrodorsal is convex with sloping sides, and apical cirrus sockets encroach on a reduced aboral pole (Fig. 3e, f, 4b–c).
By contrast, the pinnulars of the robust and occasionally spine-like P
2 in
Lamprometra
are proportionally shorter (LW of middle pinnulars 1.0–1.5, rarely longer) and bear well-developed articular facets (Fig. 2e–f). The pinnule tapers to a slender flagellate tip, and the distal pinnulars bear small spines (Fig. 1h). The lateral adambulacral margins of the brachitaxis ossicles may be weakly thickened but lack scalloped processes (
Fig. 4
d); ossicles of adjacent brachitaxes range from flattened against each other to separate (
Fig. 5
a). The centrodorsal bears a broad aboral pole with cirrus sockets restricted to the margin (
Fig. 4
e–f).
A plot of aboral pole diameter against centrodorsal diameter for
Stephanometra
and
Lamprometra
indicates that, for a given aboral pole diameter,
L. palmata
specimens have a greater centrodorsal diameter (Fig. 6a). Although slight overlap exists among several juvenile specimens, the two genera otherwise fall out as separate character spaces.
In plots of the length of pinnular 6 of P2 against several growth-related characters [axil (Ibr2) width, maximum cirrus length and arm radius], the two genera form distinctly separate character spaces with little overlap. Only the plot of pinnular length versus axil width is shown (Fig. 6b). Of the two species of
Stephanometra
recognized here (see below),
S. tenuipinna
forms a continuum with
S. indica
, reflecting the close relationship of these species.
Finally, AH
Clark (1941)
indicated that the IIIBr series was more frequently internal than external in
Stephanometra
. However, the specimens in this study develop IIIBr either externally or both internally and externally.
FIGURE 1.
a–d.
Stephanometra indica
with P2-P4 stiff and spine-like, IRSNB/CRI 396. a. P1, b. P2. c. P3. d. P4. e–g.
Lamprometra palmata
with flagellate pinnules, IRSNB/CRI 413. e. P1. f. P2. g. P3. h. Distal pinnulars of P2, NSUOC 345. Scale bars: upper (a–g)
2 mm
; lower (h)
0.5 mm
.