Sphaerasteridae Schondorf, 1906a

Gale, Andrew Scott, 2021, Taxonomy and phylogeny of the ‘ football stars’ (Asteroidea, Sphaerasteridae), Journal of Systematic Palaeontology 19 (10), pp. 691-741 : 702

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1080/14772019.2021.1960911

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:F8991F09-B5FB-40EF-B4CC-474D925085B8

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.10883569

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/B9207C41-9A7A-FFF7-0FE5-FAF4FBC5FC76

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Sphaerasteridae Schondorf, 1906a
status

 

Family Sphaerasteridae Schondorf, 1906a View in CoL

Diagnosis. A group of asteroids with spherical to sub-spherical body form, in which the abactinal surface is strongly domed and made up of relatively few, large, polygonal abactinal and actinal ossicles. Marginals are not differentiated. Primary (extra-ambulacral groove) ossicles are tabular to sub-conical in form. Adambulacral-ambulacral articulations and inter-adambulacral contacts have cavities for probable attachment of ligaments. The primary ossicles are made up of three discrete stereom layers: an external one of dense perforate stereom, a middle one of rectilinear stereom and an internal one of labyrinthic material.

Remarks. Ossicle material that was described as a stauranderasterid, Poncetaster crateri , by Villier et al. (2004b), characterized by crater-shaped spine pits, appears to be an actinal ossicle of an indeterminate sphaerasterid; this sculpture is widespread in sphaerasterids. The family Podosphaerasteridae Fujita & Rowe, 2002 is synonymized with Sphaerasteridae because the only significant supposed morphological difference, the presence of large marginal plates in the latter family, does not exist. The detailed ossicular homologies between Podosphaeraster and fossil sphaerasterids (e.g. Figs 1 View Figure 1 , 2 View Figure 2 ) outlined in this paper support this position, and the very close relationship between Podosphaeraster and Valettaster (Bremer support of 5, Fig. 4 View Figure 4 ) extends to details of many ossicle types, including orals and abactinals.

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