Ophioplinthaca athena A. H Clark, 1949
publication ID |
https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.1099.76479 |
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lsid:zoobank.org:pub:A963E7C7-F1BF-4BF2-BB4F-A0CD5D319691 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/94024E65-5460-5217-89FC-5D010B3EA05F |
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scientific name |
Ophioplinthaca athena A. H Clark, 1949 |
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Ophioplinthaca athena A. H Clark, 1949
Figs 10 View Figure 10 , 11 View Figure 11
Ophioplinthaca athena A. H Clark, 1949: 23-24, fig. 9; Chen et al. 2021b: 60-61, fig. 3.
Material examined.
Northwest Pacific • 1 specimen; near Mariana Trench, Southwest of Guam Island, seamount; 12°8.83'N, 139°0.37'E; depth 1987 m; 27 November 2020; Collecting event: stn. SC041; Shenhaiyongshi msv leg; preserved in -80 °C; GenBank: OK043833 View Materials ; IDSSE-EEB-SW0110 GoogleMaps .
Description.
Disc diameter 12.5 mm, arm base width 1.5 mm (Fig. 9 View Figure 9 ).
Disc. Sub-circular and incised interradially, creating five wedge-shaped lobes over each arm base in contrast to sunken center and interradii of disc (Fig. 10A, B View Figure 10 ). Disc scales small, irregular, overlapping, and some scales bear more than one stump (Fig. 10C-F View Figure 10 ). Scales increase in size distalwards from disc center to periphery interradially (Fig. 10D-F View Figure 10 ). Disc stumps in disc center with cylindrical base and few radiating spinules at truncated tip (Fig. 10D-F View Figure 10 ). Spines at disc periphery and around radial shields, slightly smaller, less cylindrical, more conical, smooth, with pointed tip (Fig. 10D, E View Figure 10 ). Radial shields large, 3 × as long as wide, acute proximal end, much wider and slightly convex distal end, pairs separated along proximal half, and barely connected distally (Fig. 10F View Figure 10 ). Ventral disc covered by small, overlapping disc scales without or rarely bearing conical granules (Fig. 10B, G View Figure 10 ). Genital slits conspicuous and extending from oral shield to periphery of disc (Fig. 10G View Figure 10 ). Madreporite arrowhead-shaped, as wide as long, triangular with pointed proximal end, lobed distal edge with thickened lateral margins. Other oral shields widely triangular, twice as wide as long, wide proximal angle, distal edge folded ventralwards with minute central lobe, and lateral angle connected to first lateral arm plate (Fig. 10H View Figure 10 ). Adoral shield 2 × as long as wide, with concave proximolateral margin, pair of shields proximally connected, and connected to first lateral and ventral arm plates (Fig. 10H View Figure 10 ). Jaw longer than wide, bearing one slightly blunt, flat, elongated, and large ventralmost tooth and four elongated, spiniform lateral oral papillae (Fig. 10H View Figure 10 ). Lateral oral papillae, finely rugose, equal in height to ventralmost tooth, with pointed tip (Fig. 10H View Figure 10 ). One small scale-like rounded adoral shield spine at lateral margin of adoral shield at edge of second tentacle pore (Fig. 10I View Figure 10 ).
Arms. Five slightly moniliform arms, with smooth plates. Dorsal arm plates twice as long as wide, with truncated proximal end in first dorsal arm plate (Fig. 10J View Figure 10 ), but following plates with triangular proximal end, slightly curved proximolateral margins, and convex to slightly wavy distal margins covered with minute spines (Fig. 10J, K View Figure 10 ). Dorsal arm plates at proximal to middle arm segments barely separated, but distally widely separated (Fig. 10J, K View Figure 10 ). First ventral arm plate trapezoid, as wide as long, with sunken proximal end, and distal end connected to second ventral arm plate (Fig. 10I View Figure 10 ). Following ventral arm plates twice as wide as long, with obtuse proximally, straight proximolateral margins, curved lateral angles, straight to slightly wavy distal end, distal margins covered with minute spines, and widely separated (Fig. 10L View Figure 10 ). Lateral arm plates meeting above and below (Fig. 10K-M View Figure 10 ). Up to five arm spines. Proximal arm segment bearing two dorsal and three ventral arm spines (Fig. 10M View Figure 10 ). Dorsalmost arm spines at proximal end two to two and a half arm segments in length, smooth or with few thorns at lateral edge (Fig. 10M View Figure 10 ). Next dorsal arm spine much longer, nearly four arm segments in length, smooth or with thorns at lateral margin (Fig. 10M View Figure 10 ). Ventral arm spines short, less conspicuous thorns, more rugose surface (Fig. 10L, M View Figure 10 ). First tentacle pore covered with two leaf-like tentacle scales with pointed tip (Fig. 10H, I View Figure 10 ). Following pores covered with leaf-like pointed tentacle scale with rounded base and tip covered in micro spinules (Fig. 10L View Figure 10 ).
Color. In live specimen, orange-brown dorsal disc, light color in arms and ventral disc, arm spines orange, disc spines and papillae red (Fig. 10 View Figure 10 ).
Ossicle morphology. Arm spine articulations well developed, four in number, and placed at slight angle to distal edge of lateral arm plate. Volute-shaped perforated lobe forms dorsal and distal part of articulation, with large muscle opening and small nerve opening (Fig. 11A View Figure 11 ). Distal half of inner side of lateral arm plate with group of small, irregular perforations parallel to row of spine articulations; a continuous ridge and a prominent knob close to ventral edge form vertebral articulation, shaped like a broad, nose-shaped beak (Fig. 11B View Figure 11 ). Dorsal arm spine thorny, with several longitudinal rows of perforations and widely spaced tall thorns (Fig. 11C View Figure 11 ). Dorsal arm plate triangular with smooth surface (Fig. 11D View Figure 11 ). Vertebrae with streptospondylous articulation, short, broad podial basin at proximal end and narrow small distal end (Fig. 11E-I View Figure 11 ). Dorsal end of vertebrae distally triangular and proximally flattened with longitudinal groove along midline (Fig. 11E, F View Figure 11 ). Ventral end of vertebrae with broad ambulacral groove and lateral ambulacral canals (Fig. 11G-I View Figure 11 ).
Distribution.
1866-2157 m depth, Southwest of Guam Island, Northwest Pacific, Kupuai, Hawaii Islands.
Remarks.
Ophioplinthaca athena was described by A. H Clark (1949), and recorded from deep waters in the Hawaiian Islands. Ophioplinthaca athena resembles O. papillosa , O. globata , O. hastata , O. plicata , O. carduus , O. semele , O. clothilde , and O. dipsacos in disc spine characters, but differs in arm spine, oral frame, and radial shield characters (Table 3 View Table 3 ).
Ophioplinthaca athena from the present study is similar to the holotype description, but it differs slightly by separated dorsal arm plates and the shape of the dorsal arm spines, although the latter varies within our individual. Therefore, the shape of the arm spines is not a suitable morphological character to delimit O. athena . The description of the holotype mentioned that dorsal arm plates were contiguous, but in our specimen, they are just separated along the arm, and there are no paratypes of O. athena . Therefore, this difference may be related to the size of the specimen (holotype 14.5 mm disc diameter; A. H. Clark 1949), and these small morphological differences can be considered as intraspecific variation within O. athena .
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
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Ophioplinthaca athena A. H Clark, 1949
Nethupul, Hasitha, Stoehr, Sabine & Zhang, Haibin 2022 |
Ophioplinthaca athena
A. H Clark 1949 |