Sthenaster emmae Mah et al. 2010

Mah, Christopher L., 2020, New species, occurrence records and observations of predation by deep-sea Asteroidea (Echinodermata) from the North Atlantic by NOAA ship Okeanos Explorer, Zootaxa 4766 (2), pp. 201-260 : 237-238

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.11646/zootaxa.4766.2.1

publication LSID

urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:B47DC09C-181A-4DFE-B415-770AFFC11BD3

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3803708

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03AE8786-FF99-D565-FF40-250AFCC65DD3

treatment provided by

Carolina

scientific name

Sthenaster emmae Mah et al. 2010
status

 

Sthenaster emmae Mah et al. 2010 View in CoL

Figure 17 View FIGURE 17 A–D

In situ images of this species were identified based on the distinctive arrangement of abactinal plates as well as the wide superomarginal interradial plates. This is contrasted with those in Gilbertaster which are more elongate. Color in life of this species is white on the disk surface with darker orange plates. Arms are a more solid colored light orange. A second morphotype, of what is interpreted as a smaller individual was a uniform pink-brown in color.

New observations of this species in conjunction with the extensive survey observations of Okeanos Explorer throughout the Gulf of Mexico and adjacent regions show occurrence to be limited to the southeastern coastal region of North America, specifically, the Savannah Banks and Central Plateau Scarp region.

Feeding & Other Observations

Imagery collected by the Okeanos Explorer are the first clear observations of this species in situ and apparently feeding on prey. Initial determination of the predatory status of Sthenaster emmae was based primarily on gut contents of the holotype, which included spicules from Eunicella modesta (Verrill 1883) as well as unclear video. Video observations captured one small individual on a denuded stalk projecting from dead Lophelia . Other imagery captured Sthenaster with a swollen disk possibly hunched over an unidentified prey item.

Occurrence: Savannah Banks and off the coast of Jacksonville, FL, Central Plateau Scarp and Richardson’s Jellyfish, 252– 874 m.

Images Examined

Central Plateau Scarp, 30.924592, -78.088036, 874 m, EX1903L2_IMG_20190629T165108Z_ROVHD.jpg (small individual)

Central Plateau Scarp, 30.925962, -78.089989, 865 m,

EX1903L2_IMG_20190629T184639Z_ROVHD.jpg (swollen)

Central Plateau scarp, 30.924906, -78.088884, 870 m

EX1903L2_IMG_20190629T173638Z_ROVHD.jpg (swollen)

Richardson’s Jellyfish, 30.924993, -78.089565, 865 m,

EX1903L2_IMG_20190701T 180214 Z_ROVHD.jpg

GBIF Dataset (for parent article) Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF