Clarkcomanthus luteofuscum (H. L. Clark, 1915)

Kogo, Ichizo, Fujita, Toshihiko & Kubodera, Tsunemi, 2019, Shallow-water Comatulids (Echinodermata: Crinoidea) from Ambon and Lombok Islands, Indonesia, Species Diversity 24, pp. 229-246 : 234-235

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.12782/specdiv.24.229

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03B0EE12-FF8C-FFA8-FCD9-FB8FFF12FD80

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Clarkcomanthus luteofuscum (H. L. Clark, 1915)
status

 

Clarkcomanthus luteofuscum (H. L. Clark, 1915) View in CoL

Comanthus luteofuscum H. L. Clark, 1915: 102 .

Comanthus luteofusea —H. L. Clark 1921: 18.

Clarkcomanthus luteofuscum View in CoL — Rowe et al. 1986: 233, figs 2c, d, 7a, b; Fabricius 1994: 1228 (table); Messing 1994: 239 (list); 1998b: 189 (table); 2007: 97; Rowe and Gates 1995: 142; Kogo 1998: 50, fig. 39; MarshallCrossland and Price 1999: 25; Kirkendale and Messing 2003: 530; Kogo and Fujita 2005: 335; Summers et al. 2014: 336.

Comanthus samoana (not of A. H. Clark, 1909f)—A. H. Clark 1931: 593 (part); 1936: 298 (part).

Comanthus samoanus (not of A. H. Clark, 1909f)— Meyer and Macurda 1980: 81.

Cenolia samoana (not of A. H. Clark, 1909f)—H. L. Clark 1946: 36 (part).

Material examined. 3 specimens. Ambon Is. NSMT E-8141 (1 specimen), E-8142 (1), Tial , 10 m, November 30, 1992; NSMT E-8190 (1), Lilibooi, 15–20 m, December 9, 1992 .

Description. Centrodorsal small, discoidal, 3.1–3.3 mm across, up to 1.2 mm thick, with cirrus sockets aligned in 1, partly 2 rows. Cirr XVII–XX, 13–15, 8– 10 mm long. Longest cirrals (5 th –7 th) 1.2 times longer than wide; cirrals beyond 7 th with transverse ridge; 2–4 distal cirrals usually with aboral spine. Radials mostly concealed by centrodorsal. IBr 2: Ibr 1 trapezoidal, in contact laterally, Ibr 2 (axil) triangular, free laterally. IIBr 2 or 4(3+4). III–IVBr 4(3+4), rarely 2. Arms stout, 33–46, 60– 75 mm long; anterior arms not much longer than posterior arms; first syzygy at br 3+4. PII longest, 11–14 mm long, of 30–35 segments; combs of 10–12 discrete teeth confluent with outer edge of pinnulars. PII, PIII, and P 1 much longer than succeeding pinnules. Pinnule combs to P 2.

Distribution. Western, northern, and eastern Australia, Indonesia, Melanesia ( Rowe et al. 1986); Sumatra ( MarshallCrossland and Price 1999); Great Barrier Reef ( Fabricius 1994); Sulu Sea, Papua New Guinea, Micronesia ( Messing 1994, 1998b, 2007; Kirkendale and Messing 2003); Japan ( Kogo and Fujita 2005). Depth range: 0–18 m ( Rowe et al. 1986).

NSMT

National Science Museum (Natural History)

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Echinodermata

Class

Crinoidea

Order

Comatulida

Family

Comatulidae

Genus

Clarkcomanthus

Loc

Clarkcomanthus luteofuscum (H. L. Clark, 1915)

Kogo, Ichizo, Fujita, Toshihiko & Kubodera, Tsunemi 2019
2019
Loc

Clarkcomanthus luteofuscum

Summers, M. M. & Messing, C. G. & Rouse, G. W. 2014: 336
Kogo, I. & Fujita, T. 2005: 335
Kirkendale, L. & Messing, C. G. 2003: 530
MarshallCrossland, J. I. & Price, A. R. G. 1999: 25
Kogo, I. 1998: 50
Rowe, F. W. E. & Gates, J. 1995: 142
Fabricius, E. K. 1994: 1228
Messing, C. G. 1994: 239
Rowe, F. W. E. & Hoggett, A. K. & Birtles, R. A. & Vail, L. L. 1986: 233
1986
Loc

Comanthus samoanus

Meyer, D. L. & Macurda, D. B. Jr. 1980: 81
1980
Loc

Cenolia samoana

Clark, H. L. 1946: 36
1946
Loc

Comanthus samoana

Clark, A. H. 1931: 593
1931
Loc

Comanthus luteofusea

Clark, H. L. 1921: 18
1921
Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF