Davidaster Rubiginosus
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

''Davidaster rubiginosus'' or the orange sea lily is a species of crinoid in the family
Comatulidae Comatulidae is a family of comatulid crinoids. Since 2015, it replaces the family Comasteridae. Description and characteristics This family is of recent restoration, and still has no consensual description. However the description of the fam ...
. At one time it was classified as ''Nemaster rubiginosa'' but the World Register of Marine Species has determined that the valid name is ''Davidaster rubiginosus''. It is found on reefs in the tropical western Atlantic and the Caribbean Sea.


Description

The orange sea lily is a stalkless crinoid. It has twenty to thirty five arms long radiating from the calyx, a cup-like body with a lid, the tegmen. Each arm is feather-like and has many pinnules projecting alternately from one side and the other. These have an
ambulacral groove Ambulacral is a term typically used in the context of anatomical parts of the phylum Echinodermata or class Asteroidea and Edrioasteroidea. Echinoderms can have ambulacral parts that include ossicles, plates, spines, and suckers. For example, sea ...
on the oral surface which is continuous with the groove on the arm. The arms are usually orange with yellow curved up tips but there is some variation in colour and they are sometimes white with black tips. The grooves are black. The arms and pinnules are composed of a series of jointed plates and there are three tube feet at each junction. The tube feet produce strands of mucus which trap plankton. Food particles are passed along the grooves by cilia to the mouth which is at the centre of the tegmen.


Distribution and habitat

The orange sea lily is found on reefs at depths of between . Its range includes Florida, the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico and the Bahamas southwards to the coast of Brazil. In the daytime it usually keeps its body hidden in a crevice, under coral or inside a sponge, with several of its arms extended to filter feed. In strong currents or heavy seas, it stops feeding and retracts all its arms. At night it emerges from its hiding place and may be found poised on top of a coral or sea fan with its arms extended to feed.


Reproduction

In a study in Jamaica, it was found that, unlike many tropical crinoids, the orange sea lily has a regular annual breeding cycle involving the release into the sea of gametes in the late autumn and winter. After fertilisation the eggs hatch into barrel-shaped vitellaria larva with several rings of cilia. These do not feed and after a few days settle on the seabed and undergo
metamorphosis Metamorphosis is a biological process by which an animal physically develops including birth or hatching, involving a conspicuous and relatively abrupt change in the animal's body structure through cell growth and differentiation. Some inse ...
into juvenile sea lilies.


References

{{Taxonbar, from=Q5241532 Comatulidae Animals described in 1869 Taxa named by Louis François de Pourtalès