Morphological comparison of Astropecten cingulatus and a new species of Astropecten (Paxillosida, Astropectinidae) from the Gulf of Mexico
Author
Lawrence, John M.
Author
Cobb, Janessa C.
Author
Herrera, Joan C.
Author
Durán-González, Alicia
Author
Solís-Marín, Francisco Alonso
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-04-09
4407
1
86
100
journal article
30306
10.11646/zootaxa.4407.1.5
f0aa3e70-b9a6-4a0b-a541-a4aa9f9f343c
1175-5326
1216440
D3FDB6ED-822C-442B-BAB7-A0641633DC79
Astropecten karankawai
n. sp.
Figures 3
,
4c, 4d
,
5
,
7
,
8
,
11
,
12
,
13b
,
14
; as
Astropecten cingulatus
:
Downey 1973
: 115
, pl. 5a,b; Downey, in
A.M. Clark & Downey 1992
: pl. 6e,f.
Diagnosis.
Arms long and narrow, tapering rapidly to a narrow tip. Paxillar area very narrow. Paxillae of disk with thin rod-shaped spinelets surrounding several central granules. Superomarginal plates wide and covered in granules, typically without spines. Inferomarginal plates typically with three or four fringe spines. Inferomarginal plate actinal surface with few or no squamules, resulting in bare patches surrounded by long acute spines. Adambulacral plates in the mid-arm region with three short, pointed furrow spines in the first row adjacent to the adambulacral furrow (furrow spines). Behind this first row of spines in large specimens is an acute central spine that is longer and wider than all other adambulacral spines. Between the furrow spines and this enlarged spine is a distinct bare patch on the actinal surface of the adambulacral plate. The other three sides of the enlarged spine are surrounded by a semi-circle of very short, thin spinelets. In wet specimens, these spinelets appear thicker and conical because of the epithelium. The enlarged spine of the subambulacral spines may be replaced by a pedicellaria in large specimens. Small specimens have fewer subambulacral spines of similar length arranged in two rows of three spines. Pedicellariae common in paxillar area and on adambulacral and actinolateral plates of large specimens.
Material Examined.
Holotype
:
USNM
1422432 (formerly
TCRC
3-0938/
FSBC
I 134512) 1 dry specimen, R =
79mm
, r =
15mm
, SM# = 32. SW Gulf of
Mexico
, 23˚29ˈN, 97˚26ˈW,
208m
.
Paratypes
:
FSBC
I 128143 2 wet specimens*, 29˚54.56ˈN, 87˚06.21ˈW,
129m
;
FSBC
I 129419 5 wet specimens, 29˚54.00ˈN, 87˚07.43ˈW,
128m
;
FSBC
I 134511 2 dry specimens, 23˚29ˈN, 97˚26ˈW,
77m
;
USNM
1422433 (formerly
FSBC
I 129143) 3 wet specimens*, 29˚54.56ˈN, 87˚06.21ˈW,
129m
;
TCRC
3-0938 11 dry specimens, 23˚29ˈN, 97˚26ˈW,
208m
;
TCRC
3-1343 6
dry specimens, 28˚04ˈN, 91˚27.5ˈW,
117m
;
USNM
E22502
16 dry specimens, 28˚44.07ˈN, 89˚44.12ˈW,
85m
.
*Some specimens include dry fragments.
Other specimens: ICML-UNAM 2.135.0 (n=5) 19˚06ˈN, 92˚39ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.1 (n=5) 19˚54ˈN, 92˚53ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.10 (n=2) 24˚40ˈN, 96˚52ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.11 (n=1) 19˚04ˈN, 92˚43ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.14 (n=2) 18˚52ˈN, 95˚33ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.18 (n=1) 19˚24ˈN, 92˚46ˈW; ICML- UNAM 2.135.19 (n=4) 23˚16ˈN, 87˚39ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.2 (n=5) 18˚35ˈN, 94˚00ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.20 (n=7) 25˚00ˈN, 96˚51ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.21 (n=3) 23˚00ˈN, 97˚29ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.22 (n=18) 24˚37ˈN, 97˚10ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.23 (n=44) 18˚54ˈN, 95˚32ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.24 (n=14) 22˚10ˈN, 97˚43ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.25 (n=24) 18˚48ˈN, 93˚11ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.26 (n=4) 25˚00ˈN, 96˚51ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.27 (n=1) 19˚56ˈN, 91˚51ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.28 (n=1) 23˚24ˈN, 89˚07ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.29 (n=24) 21˚05ˈN, 97˚01ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.3 (n=3) 24˚20ˈN, 97˚00ˈW; ICML- UNAM 2.135.30 (n=1) 21˚05ˈN, 97˚04ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.31 (n=23) 21˚05ˈN, 97˚01ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.32 (n=2) 21˚43ˈN, 96˚50ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.33 (n=3) 18˚47ˈN, 93˚36ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.34 (n=1) 19˚31ˈN, 91˚37ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.35 (n=1) 23˚49ˈN, 97˚37ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.36 (n=1) 18˚23ˈN, 94˚23ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.38 (n=14) 18˚54ˈN, 95˚32ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.39 (n=1) 25˚56ˈN, 97˚02ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.4 (n=133) 18˚58ˈN, 95˚36ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.40 (n=1) 25˚20ˈN, 97˚14ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.41 (n=1) 22˚11ˈN, 91˚34ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.42 (n=1) 22˚10ˈN, 91˚45ˈW; ICML- UNAM 2.135.43 (n=2) 19˚45ˈN, 92˚00ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.44 (n=4) 19˚59ˈN, 92˚01ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.45 (n=3) 18˚37ˈN, 94˚00ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.46 (n=1) 22˚16ˈN, 91˚45ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.48 (n=2) 22˚32ˈN, 90˚47ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.5 (n=605) 25˚31ˈN, 96˚41ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.6 (n=1) 19˚00ˈN, 95˚30ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.7 (n=4) 19˚05ˈN, 92˚43ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.8 (n=2) 19˚26ˈN, 92˚33ˈW; ICML-UNAM 2.135.9 (n=2) 18˚50ˈN, 93˚02ˈW; UF 16346 (n=1) 29˚08ˈN, 88˚42ˈW; USNM E08437 (n=3) 28˚10ˈN, 92˚21ˈW; USNM E12858 (n=3) 28˚47ˈN, 89˚45ˈW; USNM E12859 (n=3) 29˚08ˈN, 88˚51ˈW; USNM E12860 (n=2) 28˚48ˈN, 89˚26ˈW; USNM E12861 (n=1) 27˚56ˈN, 94˚00ˈW; USNM E13820 (n=3) 29˚10ˈN, 88˚48ˈW; USNM
E22502
(n=16) 28˚44ˈN, 89˚44ˈW; USNM
E22503
(n=33) 28˚10ˈN, 91˚30ˈW; USNM
E22504
(n=16) 28˚14ˈN, 91˚41ˈW; USNM
E23177
(n=5) 29˚15ˈN, 88˚37ˈW; USNM E24636 (n=3) 29˚47ˈN, 87˚17ˈW; USNM
E24686
(n=11) 29˚19ˈN, 88˚45ˈW; USNM
E34916
(n=3) 23˚29ˈN, 97˚26ˈW; USNM E38730 (n=1) 19˚08ˈN, 93˚04ˈW; USNM
E45660
(n=3) 29˚12ˈN, 88˚53ˈW; USNM
E45675
(n=2) 29˚10ˈN, 88˚40ˈW; USNM
E45675
(n=2) 29˚10ˈN, 88˚04ˈW; USNM
E45676
(n=1) 28˚09ˈN, 91˚27ˈW; USNM E8437 (n=3) 28˚10ˈN, 92˚21ˈW; USNM E8438 (n=6) 28˚25ˈN, 92˚20ˈW.
Etymology.
The species is named for the Karankawa, an Indian tribe that lived on the Gulf of
Mexico
coast of
Texas
, off which the specimens in the BRTC collections were collected.
Comparison of
Astropecten karankawai
and
Astropecten cingulatus
.
Body form.
Photographs of Sladen’s small (R =
28 mm
)
holotype
of
A. cingulatus
are shown in
Figure 1
.
Figure 2
shows a larger specimen (R =
42 mm
) from
Argentina
in the MACN collections identified by
Bernasconi (1941)
as
A. cingulatus
. The disc of the specimen of
A. cingulatus
from
Argentina
is large and the arms are long and narrow. A photograph of the
holotype
(large specimen) and a
paratype
(small specimen) of
A. karankawai
are shown in
Figure 3
. They have a small disk and long, narrow arms.
FIGURE 1.
Astropecten cingulatus
: Holotype. Left, Abactinal view. Right, Actinal view. R = 28 mm.
Regression equations for r vs R, R:r vs R, AW vs R, and AL:AW vs. R for
Astropecten cingulatus
and
Astropecten karankawai
are given in
Table 1
All regression equations are similar between species with only minor differences in slope. A difference in slope (F1,83 = 0.107,
p
= 0.744) and intercept (F1,83 = 2.347,
p
= 0.129) was not detected for R:r by ANCOVA. The longer, narrower arms of
A. karankawai
are the result of the narrow paxillar area and an allometric increase in R:
r with
an increase in R.
Abactinal surface.
The paxillar area of
A. karankawai
(
Fig. 3
) is narrower than that of
A. cingulatus
(
Figs. 1
,
2
). The width of the paxillar area of the specimen Downey (in
Clark & Downey 1992
) identified as
A. cingulatus
(her Plate 9 E, F) appears like that of
A. karankawai
.
This difference in PAX can be seen in the regression equations (
Table 1
). The narrow paxillar area is responsible for the narrow arm width of
A. karankawai
.
This distinguishes the species.
The paxillae of the
type
specimen of
A. cingulatus
has numerous central granules (
Figs. 4A, B
). The paxillae of
A. karankawai
have thin rod-shaped spinelets surrounding several central granules similar to
A. cingulatus
(
Figs. 4C, D
). Spinelets are thinner distally and in small individuals. Pedicellariae may be present in the paxillar area of
A. karankawai
(
Fig. 4D
). We did not observe any pedicellariae in the paxillar area of the
A. cingulatus
we examined.
Superomarginal plates.
The regression equations for SM# and R:SM# vs. R of
A. cingulatus
and
A. karankawai
are given in Table 2. SM# is not large in either species and only slightly larger in
A. cingulatus
than in
A. karankawai
.
As a result, R:SM# is slightly smaller. ANCOVA detected a difference in slopes (F1,83 = 15.437,
p
<0.001) of R:SM# but no difference in the intercepts (F1,83 = 3.926,
p
= 0.051).
The SM plates of both
A. cingulatus
(
Figs. 1
,
2
) and
A. karankawai
(
Fig. 3
) are wide and are casually indistinguishable. When the proximal SMW of both species were compared with an ANCOVA, they did not pass the test of equal slopes (F1,34 = 1.450,
p
= 0.238) and there was no difference in the intercept of the regression equations (F1,34 = 0.804,
p
= 0.377).
The SM plates of
A. karankawai
are covered with uniform granules (
Fig. 4D
) that are less dense and smaller than those of
A. cingulatus
(
Fig. 4B
). Note the difference in magnification for the photographs of
A. cingulatus
and
A. karankawai
.
Twenty specimens of
A. karankawai
were examined for the presence of spines on the SM plates. Three specimens had a single conical spine on the inner margin of 2–4 interradial SM plates (
Fig. 5
) and one specimen had similar spines on the interradial and non-consecutive proximal SM plates. No spines were observed on the outer margin of the SM plates. No spines were observed on the SM plates of eleven specimens of
A. cingulatus
we examined. Spination of the SM plates does not distinguish the species.
FIGURE 2.
Astropecten cingulatus
from off Buenos Aires province, R = 42 mm: Left. abactinal view. Right, actinal view. Modified from Bernasconi (1941, Plate VII).
FIGURE 3.
Astropecten karankawai
from off the coast of Texas: Holotype (large specimen), R = 79 mm. Paratype (small specimen), R = 25 mm. Left, Abactinal view. Right, Actinal view.
Inferomarginal plates.
The
holotype
of
A. cingulatus
has two large, moderately long IM fringe spines of equal length on the IM plates (
Fig. 6
). A tiny third spine often occurs proximally. Fringe spines are round with slightly compressed tips. Some specimens in the NMNH identified as
A. cingulatus
(e.g., USNM E14309, USNM
E18399
) have three fringe spines while others (e.g., USNM
E18420
, USNM
E18415
) have two. Of eleven specimens of
A. cingulatus
examined from the Caribbean Sea or off the east coast of South America, seven had two fringe spines when R <
30 mm
and four had three fringe spines when R>
30mm
. The number of fringe spines in
A. cingulatus
can be two or three.
FIGURE 4.
Superomarginal plates and paxillae: A, B:
Astropecten cingulatus
.
Holotype. A, disk paxillae. B, paxillae at midarm and granulated SM plates. C, D:
Astropecten karankawai
.
C, disk paxillae. D, paxillae at mid-arm with pedicellariae (arrows) and granulated SM plates of a dried specimen.
FIGURE 5.
Superomarginal plates of
A. karankawai
with small spines at the interradius (arrows).
Astropecten karankawai
has round to slightly compressed IM fringe spines. Specimens from off the coast of
Texas
in the TCRC collections have three spines in the mid-arm region. Large specimens from off the coast of
Louisiana
(FSBC I 128143, FSBC I 129419) have three or four spines (
Fig. 7
), although the fourth proximal spine is usually slightly shorter and thinner. Of
51 specimens
of
A. karankawai
examined, two had one fringe spine when R =
8–10 mm
, 21 had two fringe spines when R =
15–32 mm
, 22 had three fringe spines when R =
22–78 mm
, and 6 had 3–4 fringe spines when R =
78–104 mm
. Like
A. cingulatus
,
the number of fringe spines of
A. karankawai
increases with body size. The number of fringe spines in
A. karankawai
can be two to four spines. The number of fringe spines does not distinguish the species.
FIGURE 6.
Astropecten cingulatus
: Holotype (R = 28 mm). A, actinal surface of arm. B, abactinal surface of arm. Fr: fringe spines.
FIGURE 7.
Astropecten karankawai
: IM plate fringe spines.
FIGURE 8.
Astropecten karankawai
,
actinal surface of IM plates: A. Dry specimen. B, Wet specimen.
The actinal surface of the IM plates of
A. cingulatus
is covered with small, flat, widely spaced subcircular squamules with their transverse margins bordered with crowded ciliary spinelets. This is shown in
Figure 6A
. The actinal surface of the IM plates of
A. alligator
,
A. americanus
,
A. articulatus
,
and
A. duplicatus
are also similarly covered by dense squamules or spines. The actinal surface of the IM plates of
A. karankawai
has few or no squamules, resulting in bare patches surrounded by long acute spines (
Fig. 8
). The actinal surface of the IM plates of
A. antillensis
and
A. marginatus
also has no squamules, only marginal spines. The lack of squamules on the actinal surface of IM plates of
A. karankawai
distinguishes the species.
Adambulacral plate spination.
A photograph of the AD spination of the
holotype
of
A. cingulatus
is shown in
Figure 9
and a photograph of a specimen from off the coast of
Argentina
is shown in
Figure 10
. All specimens of
A. cingulatus
we examined had at least three rows of spines, with a fourth row of slender spines present in some large specimens, such as FSBC I 129674 from
Brazil
(R =
48 mm
). There were three furrow spines as in all North American
Astropecten
spp., with the middle spine longest and perpendicular to the adjacent spines. The subambulacral spines did not differ greatly in length except for an elongated middle spine in the second row (behind furrow spines), on plates adjacent to the actinal plates. In addition, although three spines were most common in the third or fourth rows, there were occasionally four.
FIGURE 9.
Astropecten cingulatus
,
Holotype. Spination of AD plates: A, Furrow from mid-arm (left) to the interradial area (right). Arrow: enlarged spine of the second row of the AD plates adjacent to ACT plates. B, Enlarged area of the box in panel A. 1–3: Numbers indicate each row on one AD plate.
FIGURE 10.
Astropecten cingulatus
: Spination
of AD plates at mid-arm. Numbers indicate rows from the furrow on an adambulacral plate. Photo: A. Tablado, with permission.
AD spination of
A. alligator
,
A. americanus
, and
A. nitidus
is similar to
A. cingulatus
. AD plates had 3–4 rows of spines where all spines within a single row were the same length and width as adjacent spines.
AD spination of
A. karankawai
is shown in
Figure 11
. Both
A. karankawai
and
A. cinglatlus
have three furrow spines. However, there are no discrete subambulacral rows. Behind the furrow spines is a very large, long and tapered spine surrounded on the lateral sides and behind by small spines. It is the largest of the AD spines in length and width and is usually rounded to slightly compressed. Between this long spine and the furrow row is a distinct bare patch on the AD plate. Sometimes it or one of the other subambulacral spines is replaced by a pedicellaria (
Figs. 11B
,
12
). Other subambulacral spines surrounding this spine are short, thin, and spindle-like in dry specimens (
Fig. 11A
). In wet specimens, these spines may appear conical due to the epithelium (
Fig. 11B
). The length of the median spine behind the furrow spines is allometric. Of
47 specimens
of
A. karankawai
examined, three had a median AD spine less than the length of the central furrow spine when R =
8–17 mm
, 14 had a median AD spine equal in length or longer to the central furrow spine when R =
15–22 mm
, and 31 had a median AD spine longer than the central furrow spine when R =
17–104 mm
. This indicates that
A. karankawai
can be distinguished by the AD spination from
A. cingulatus
when R is greater than
22 mm
.
FIGURE 11.
Astropecten karankawai
AD spination at mid-arm: A, Dry specimen. B, wet specimen. 1: first row of spines. 2: Enlarged median spine. 3: Semicircle of subambulacral spinelets. Arrow: pedicellaria.
FIGURE 12.
Astropecten karankawai
AD pedicellaria (arrow) of a dry specimen.
AD spination of
A. marginatus
and
A. antillensis
was similar to
A. karankawai
except that the spines of the second row in
A. antillensis
are usually flat, acute and all spines are arranged in discrete rows. In
A. marginatus
the short spines, behind the furrow spines typically surround the median spine which is larger and wider than all other spines on the plate.
Actinal intermediate plates.
Five or six ACT plates per interradial area are present on the
holotype
of
A.
cingulatus
(
Fig. 13A
) and up to 10 plates on other specimens from the Caribbean or South America. All specimens of
A. cingulatus
examined had a large central spinelet on most ACT and on AD plates adjacent to the ACT plates. The ACT plates of
A. karankawai
are similar to those of
A. cingulatus
(
Fig. 13B
) in number and spination. Pedicellariae were also frequently observed on ACT plates of
A. karankawai
.
FIGURE 13.
Actinal intermediate plates: A,
Astropecten cingulatus
.
Holotype. B,
Astropecten karankawai
. Arrow: pedicellaria.
Color. There is no photo of living
A. karankawai
. The abactinal surface of specimens preserved in ethanol short period of time before drying is orange with dark shading on the sides of the arms (
Fig. 14
). Small dry specimens retain a rust color around the borders of the paxillar area although large specimens lose all color with drying.
FIGURE 14.
Astropecten karankawai
after preservation in ethanol.
Distribution of specimens.
Specimens of
A. cingulatus
examined in this study are illustrated in
Figure 15
. Catalog numbers of specimens measured are given in the legend to
Table 1
.
Astropecten cingulatus
has been reported from off the coast of North and South America and in the Gulf of
Mexico
(Downey, in
A.M. Clark & Downey 1992
). Downey (in
A.M. Clark & Downey 1992
) gave the depth range of
A. cingulatus
as
100–1350 m
. Specimens of
A. karankawai
have been collected in the Gulf of
Mexico
at depths of
20–600 m
(
Fig. 15
).