The genera and species of Comatulidae (Comatulida: Crinoidea): taxonomic revisions and a molecular and morphological guide
Author
Summers, Mindi M.
Author
Messing, Charles G.
Author
Rouse, Greg W.
text
Zootaxa
2017
4268
2
151
190
journal article
33045
10.11646/zootaxa.4268.2.1
e114acb7-3683-4094-a53f-c9bc7ed84353
1175-5326
580173
0742D287-B82C-4014-A6AC-C357F259D5D7
Anneissia
Summers, Messing, & Rouse, 2014
Table 1
;
Figs. 10–11
Type species.
Alecto bennetti
Müller, 1841
.
Other included taxa (8).
Actinometra grandicalyx
Carpenter, 1882
;
Alecto japonica
Müller, 1841
;
Comantheria intermedia
AH
Clark, 1916a
;
Comanthus (Cenolia) trichoptera benhami
AH
Clark, 1916b
,
Comanthus pinguis
AH
Clark, 1909c
;
Comanthus plectrophorum
HL Clark, 1916;
Comatula solaster
AH
Clark, 1907b
;
Oxycomanthus muelleri
Rowe, Hoggett, Birtles & Vail, 1986
.
Diagnosis.
Mouth excentric in fully developed individuals; up to 120 arms; centrodorsal circular, large and thick; cirri always present (
Fig. 10
E–H); IBr2 united by synarthry; IIBr and beyond all 4(3+4); first syzygy at 3+4 on all undivided arms; distal intersyzygial interval 4, occasionally 5; distalmost pinnule comb on P2 to P5; comb tapering distally, sometimes to a sharp point with the distal segments fused; comb composed of nonconfluent erect, well-separated teeth (
Fig.
10
I).
Distribution.
Tropical and temperate Indo-western Pacific from
Australia
(apparently absent from the west coast) and
New
Zealand
, west at least to Great Coco I., Andaman Is., east to
Kwajalein Atoll
and
New Caledonia
, and north to Sagami Bay and
Toyama
Bay,
Japan
. Depth range: shoreline-
330 m
.
Depth records greater than
100 m
are chiefly attributed to specimens of
A. pinguis
and
A. solaster
from
Japan
(
Kogo 1998
), and
A. plectrophorum
from
New
Zealand
(to
808–925 m
as
Comissia mathesoni
McKnight, 1977b
[=
A. plectrophorum
]) (AH
Clark 1931
;
Kogo 1998
;
Rowe & Gates 1995
;
Rowe 1989
).
Molecular results.
Specimens of
Anneissia japonica
and
A. bennetti
form separate clades in parsimony and likelihood analysis (
Fig. 11
), with greater than 5.4% uncorrected
COI
distance between specimens from each clade.
Specimens
of
A. bennetti
were recovered in two clades (referred to as ‘
type
A’ and ‘
type
B’), 3.3% divergent from each other, each with less than 0.6%
intra
clade divergence.
Anneissia bennetti
type
A included specimens collected from Lizard
Island
(the
neotype
),
Queensland
,
Australia
, and
Madang
, Papua New Guinea.
Anneissia bennetti
type B specimens were from Raja Ampat,
Indonesia
and
East Timor
.
Remarks.
As a result of recovering the
type
species of
Oxycomanthus
—
Comanthus (Vania) parvicirra
ß comanthipinna
Gislén, 1922
—within
Clarkcomanthus
,
Summers
et al.
(2014a)
erected
Anneissia
to include those
Oxycomanthus
species that did not fall within
Clarkcomanthus
and were considered a ‘natural group’ by Rowe & Hoggett (1986) (
plectrophorum
,
bennetti
,
pinguis
, japonicus,
solaster
, intermedius
, and
grandicalyx
). Characters shared by this group include large size and bulkiness, large centrodorsal, and numerous long cirri (chiefly>30 to as many as 73, of 20 to as many as 38 cirrals). Species now placed in
Clarkcomanthus
rarely have as many as 20 cirri (often none) of usually 15 or fewer cirrals (at most 20) (AH
Clark 1931
; Rowe
et al.
1986). Some of the members of this genus may be synonyms; AH
Clark (1931)
regarded
pinguis
,
japonica
, and
solaster
to be closely related and possibly forms of the same species. He described
pinguis
and
japonica
as both having long stout cirri of more than 32 cirrals, and
solaster
with shorter, slenderer cirri of <30 (usually <25) cirrals; but with brachitaxes broad and aborally flattened in
pinguis
and
solaster
versus narrow and aborally convex in
japonica
.
Kogo (1998)
diagnosed
japonica
as having,>30 cirri <
25 mm
long, of 22 cirrals;
pinguis
with>30 cirri
30–40 mm
long, of 25–32 cirrals, and
solaster
with <25 cirri
24 mm
long, of 15–25 cirrals (although his description of the latter indicates 31 cirrals). In contrast to AH Clark, he described and illustrated brachitaxes as well-separated in
solaster
and
pinguis
, and apposed in
japonica
.