THE
OREASTERIDAE
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,
ACANTHASTERIDAE, AND
ASTEROPSEIDAE
Although still supported as a member of the
Valvatida
and/or Valvatacea in Figure 1
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, the oreasterid/ asteropseid lineage has historically been considered as most closely related to either the
Goniasteridae
and/or the
Ophidiasteridae
. The close relationship between the oreasterids and asteropseids (node O in Fig. 1
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) agrees with Blake (1987) and Gale (1987b), but our topology agrees more closely with the tree of Blake (1987) in that it supports poraniids as a lineage separate from asteropseids. Gale (1987b) considered asteropseids as members of the same lineage as poraniids.
The
Asteropseidae
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was not supported as monophyletic, supporting
Asteropsis
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,
Dermasterias
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, and
Petricia
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on different lineages.
Asteropsis
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most closely resembles the tree topology presented by Blake (1987) in that it is supported as sister taxon to the goniasterid-like oreasterid
Monachaster
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on the sister clade to the large primary
Oreasteridae
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(
Culcita
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,
Oreaster
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, etc.).
Petricia
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was supported as the sister taxon to
Acanthaster
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.
Dermasterias
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was supported as the sister taxon to the
Asterinidae
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+
Solasteridae
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+
Ganeriidae
+
Leilasteridae
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in the three-gene tree (node P in Fig. 1
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) with moderate bootstrap support (65%). Although we used the relationships in Figure 1
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as the basis of rooting the asterinid tree in Figure 2
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, placing the root at the branch subtending node 2 rather than at node 1 would still leave the asterinid tree monophyletic and would group
Dermasterias
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with the remaining members of the asteropseid/ oreasterid clade, which is more consistent with prior classifications (e.g. Hotchkiss & Clark, 1976).
Acanthaster
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is supported as the sister group to the included oreasterids, which is consistent with the close relationship between the
Acanthasteridae
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and the
Oreasteridae
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as supported by Blake (1979, 1987) based on skeletal evidence. In our tree, the (
Oreasteridae
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+
Asteropseidae
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) +
Acanthasteridae
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/
Asteropseidae
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clade is supported (node N in Fig. 1
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) as the sister clade to the large
Asterinidae
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+
Ganeriidae
+
Leilasteridae
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+
Solasteridae
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+
Dermasterias
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clade, which is a substantial departure from prior phylogenetic hypotheses.
The presence of
Acanthaster
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as the sister taxon to the
Oreasteridae
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+
Asteropsis
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is consistent with the morphological evidence and phylogenetic hypothesis of Blake (1979, 1987). He documented an Eocene oreasterid ( Blake, 1979) that was close to
Anthenea
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or
Goniodiscaster
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and showed a morphology demonstrating characters consistent with
Acanthaster
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and other
Oreasteridae
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. Thus, oreasterid fossil occurrence can be shown to be present in the Eocene. Otherwise, there are relatively few oreasterid fossils known and most are either too poorly known or too incomplete to be useful here.