Deep-sea ophiuroids (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea: Ophiurida) from the Gulf of Cadiz (NE Atlantic)
Author
Rodrigues, Clara F.
Author
Paterson, Gordon L. J.
Author
Cabrinovic, Andrew
Author
Cunha, Marina R.
text
Zootaxa
2011
2754
1
26
journal article
10.5281/zenodo.276727
dfcdb58a-4300-4aae-ae13-125628f51de7
1175-5326
276727
Amphiura
sp. A
Stöhr and Segonzac, 2005
Amphiura
sp.
Stöhr and Segonzac 2005
: 396
–397, figure 8
Material examined.
Kidd MV, TTR14, stn AT528, 6 inds. (
DBUA
001077.01); stn AT560, 3 ind. (
DBUA
001077.02); Meknès MV, TTR14 stn AT541, 9 inds. (
DBUA
001077.03); Yuma MV, TTR16, stn AT604, 1 ind. (
DBUA
001078.01); Darwin MV, TTR16, stn AT608, 1 ind. (
DBUA
001078.02); Captain Arutyunov MV, TTR14, stn AT546, 3 inds. (
DBUA
001077.04); West of
Gibraltar
Strait, TTR14, stn AT551, 1 ind. (
DBUA
001077.05); Pen Duick Escarpment, TTR16, stn AT600, 1 ind. (
DBUA
001078.03).
Remarks.
This species, herein designated as
Amphiura
sp. A
, closely resembles the description given by
Stöhr and Segonzac (2005)
from West Atlantic cold seeps. The species is characterised by, having two tentacle scales on each arm tentacle pore and a scale-like distal oral scale, ten with a more spike-like scale situated on the adoral shields and just three arm spines, a character shared with other
Amphiura
species, the middle arm spine of the three is swollen.
We have not formally classified this species because
Amphiura
species with three arm spines are common within the family (approximately 28 species). To formally name this species would require a major taxonomic review which is beyond the scope of the present work.
Ecology and distribution.
Amphiura
sp. A as described by Stöhr & Segonzac was previously known from mud sediments among chemosynthetic fauna (
Bathymodiolus boomerang
,
Escarpia
sp.) of the Orinoco cold seeps, West Atlantic, at
1947 m
. In the Gulf of Cadiz it has a wide distribution in the shallow and western areas of the Moroccan margin (carbonate provinces) predominantly associated to the presence of carbonate crusts and covering a bathymetric range of.
489–1345 m
(
Fig. 7
C). It was recorded from five mud volcanoes and two other sites with carbonate chimneys or crusts, often co-occurring with
Amphipholis squamata
and occasionally with other
Amphiuridae
(
Amphioplus hexabrachiatus
,
Amphiura filiformis
and
Amphiura grandisquama
).