Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871

Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman, 1871 (Fig. 1) Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman, 1871: 471.— Lyman, 1878: 149.— Lyman, 1882: 185 –186, pl. 46 (7–9).— Studer, 1882: 23 – 24.— Koehler, 1907: 321 –323 (in part).— Koehler, 1908: 276.— Koehler, 1914: 96.— Koehler, 1922: 12 –13.— Mortensen, 1936: 246 –248, fig...

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Main Authors: Brogger, Martin I., O'Hara, Timothy D.
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Zenodo 2015
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Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106870
https://zenodo.org/record/6106870
id ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6106870
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Echinodermata
Ophiuroidea
Ophiurida
Ophiacanthidae
Ophiacantha
Ophiacantha vivipara
spellingShingle Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Echinodermata
Ophiuroidea
Ophiurida
Ophiacanthidae
Ophiacantha
Ophiacantha vivipara
Brogger, Martin I.
O'Hara, Timothy D.
Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871
topic_facet Biodiversity
Taxonomy
Animalia
Echinodermata
Ophiuroidea
Ophiurida
Ophiacanthidae
Ophiacantha
Ophiacantha vivipara
description Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman, 1871 (Fig. 1) Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman, 1871: 471.— Lyman, 1878: 149.— Lyman, 1882: 185 –186, pl. 46 (7–9).— Studer, 1882: 23 – 24.— Koehler, 1907: 321 –323 (in part).— Koehler, 1908: 276.— Koehler, 1914: 96.— Koehler, 1922: 12 –13.— Mortensen, 1936: 246 –248, fig. 5 a, pl. 7 (2).— Bernasconi, 1965: 151 –152.— Castillo-Alarcón, 1968: 45 –47, fig. R, pl. 1 (4,6).— Bernasconi, 1973: 331 –332.— Bernasconi & d'Agostino, 1977: 107 –109, pl. 10 (3,4).— Lucchi, 1985: 133 –134, fig. 49–50. Ophiacantha ingrata .— Bernasconi & d'Agostino, 1975 b: 19 –21, pl. 1 (3 –4).— Bernasconi & d'Agostino, 1978: 217 [Non Ophiomitrella ingrata Koehler, 1908]. ? Ophiacantha vivipara .— Tommasi et al. , 1988: 6. Material examined . Argentina . Isla de los Estados (between Cabo San Juan and Punta Fallows), 54 ° 45.677´S, 63 ° 49.114´W, 54 m, 1934, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 21956, n= 3). East of Isla de los Estados, 54 ° 47´S, 63 ° 35´W, 144 m, 1933 (MACN 22277, 13). 38 ° 31´S, 55 ° 42´W, 109 m, 1938, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 23346, 3). 39 ° 28´S, 57 ° 2´W, 90 m, 1941, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 25122, 5). 12 miles east from Punta Médanos Lighthouse, 39 ° 30´S – 40 ° 11´S, 109 m, 1924, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 14423, 15). Océano Atlántico Sur, 54 ° 52´S, 37 ° 28´W (MACN 28128, 3). M 2: stn E 9, off Mar del Plata, 38 ° 50.91´S, 55 ° 34.585´W, 140 m, 2009 (MACN, 15). Walther Herwig: stn 277, 40 ° 54´S, 56 ° 49´W, 300 m, identified by Bernasconi (1973) (MACN 27263, 1). South Georgia . Grytviken, 54 ° 16.905´S, 36 ° 30.394´W, 0 m, 1933, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 26927, 12). Puerto Larsen, 25–27 m, 1929, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 18768, 1). Bahía Antartica, 35–36 m, 1929, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 18760, 21). Islas Orcadas: stn 18, Georgias del Sur, 54 ° 21´S, 36 ° 1´W, 106 m, 1975, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1978) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 28139, 4). South Sandwich Is . Islas Orcadas: stn 21, Sandwich del Sur, 57 ° 47´S, 26 ° 26´W, 105 m, 1975, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1978) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 28127, 2). South Shetland Is . 61 ° 26´S, 56 ° 25´W, 1975 (MACN 34933, 25). Distribution . Malvinas / Falkland Islands, South Georgia, Patagonia to Uruguay (north to 37 °S), Chile (north to 50 °S), Brazil? Macquarie Ridge, 0–1100 m. Remarks . Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b, 1978) record a series of specimens from South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands under the name “ Ophiacantha ingrata (Koehler, 1923) ”. This is an invalid name, as Koehler did not describe a species under this name in 1923, but included photographs of both five and six-armed specimens under the previously described Ophioripa ingrata Koehler, 1908. The five-armed individuals (Koehler 1923, pl. 14, fig 5–6) have the characteristic small rounded granules and thick blunt arm spines found on the holotype of O. ingrata , which has been subsequently transferred to the genus Ophiomitrella (see O’Hara 1990). Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) are possibly correct in identifying as a separate species the small (<6 mm d.d.) six-armed specimen photographed by Koehler (1923, pl. 14, fig 5–6), with its even covering of small conical spinelets, but they are in error to re-use the specific epithet ( ingrata ) in a separate genus ( Ophiacantha ) and then attribute this name to Koehler (1923) (who actually considered both photographs to represent the same species). Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) noted the similarity of their material to the widespread species Ophiacantha vivipara , distinguishing the two species by the number of arm spines, 7–8 in “ O. ingrata ” and 10–12 in similar sized (16 mm d.d.) O. vivipara . In their synonymy of “ ingrata ”, they included a photo of a six-armed specimen from Marguerite Bay, Antarctica attributed to O. vivipara by Koehler (1912, pl. 11, fig. 2). Koehler (1912) also included a photograph of a similar looking five-armed individual (pl. 11, fig. 1). Mortensen (1936) interpreted these photographs differently. He considered the six-armed specimen to represent O. vivipara and described the five armed form as a separate variety O. vivipara var pentactis which he also distinguished on the basis of reproduction (the presence of males in pentactis ) and biogeography (no five armed specimens occur on the Patagonian Shelf), but not arm spine number. Ophiacantha pentactis was subsequently raised to species rank by Madsen (1955). Fell (1961) found no difference in arm spine number (11–12) or disc spines between his six- and five-armed specimens from the Ross Sea. The true identity of Ophiacantha vivipara is complicated by the uncertainty over the type locality. Ljungman (1871) recorded it from Altata off the Pacific coast of Mexico, however, this locality has been rejected by a series of authors and the presumed locality is now considered to be the Malvinas / Falkland Islands (Bell 1908; Fell 1961). There have been two molecular studies that have shed light on the phylogenetic relationships within the Ophiacantha vivipara complex. Martin-Ledo et al. (2013) found several distinct phylogenetic clades from around Shag Rock near South Georgia that they identify as O. vivipara , O. pentactis , the five-armed O. densispina Mortensen, 1936, a new five-armed species O. wolfarntzi , and an undescribed five-armed species (sp. 1). O’Hara et al. (2013, 2014) found three clades within O. vivipara and several others which were similar to the five-armed O. rosea Lyman, 1878. The three clades of “ vivipara ” had separate distributions: ‘A’ was predominantly circum- Antarctic, ‘B’ was subantarctic and ‘C’ occurred mainly around southern Australia and New Zealand. Clade A included both five and six-armed individuals, the others only six-armed forms. A direct comparison of the COI sequences (O’Hara unpublished data) has revealed that clade A is the same as the clade identified by Martin-Ledo et al. (2013) as O. pentactis and B as O. vivipara . In summary, there are at least three clades with six-armed forms (as well as numerous clades with only fivearmed individuals) within this complex. One clade (clade B of O’Hara et al. 2013 and the vivipara of Martin-Ledo et al. 2013) is known to occur on the Patagonian Shelf, South Georgia and the Macquarie Ridge. Presumably this clade is the one that also occurs further north along the Argentinean coast to Uruguay and in the fjords of southern Chile (although this should be checked with genetic data). It may also occur on other subantarctic islands. The second clade (clade A of O’Hara et al. 2013 and pentactis of Martin-Ledo et al. 2013) is circumpolar Antarctic as well as occurring around South Georgia (Martin-Ledo et al. 2013), South Orkney and Bouvet Islands, and on the southern Macquarie Ridge (O’Hara et al. 2013). It appears to include both five and six-armed individuals, although this should be confirmed with a study using faster evolving genetic loci than COI which is known to be unable to discriminate some echinoderm species pairs (Williams 2000). The third clade (clade C of O’Hara et al. 2013) occurs on seamounts around southern Australia and New Zealand and along the northern Macquarie Ridge. A plausible hypothesis is that these clades represent O. vivipara , O. pentactis and an undescribed Ophiacantha species respectively. Thus many of the records from Antarctica previously considered O. vivipara (e.g. Bell 1908; Koehler 1912, 1922; Fell 1961; Madsen 1967; McKnight 1967 b) are six-armed O. pentactis specimens, and records from Australia and New Zealand (O’Hara et al. 2008) are an undescribed species. The identity of specimens found in other regions remains unclear. No genetic sequences are currently available from specimens collected around Crozet, Marion, Kerguelen or Heard Islands. Specimens from around Kerguelen are frequently seven armed and may be “ vivipara ” (although the name Ophiacantha kerguelensis Studer, 1876 is available if specimens from this remote location form a distinct clade). Northern records, such as those found off Brazil (Tommasi 1970; Tommasi et al. , 1988), need to be critically compared with the six-armed Ophiacantha anomala Sars, 1871 from the North Atlantic. To test whether arm number or maximum arm spine number varied between the two western hemisphere clades as suggested by Mortensen (1936) and Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b), we compared the abundant material in the MACN from two regions: a) the Patagonian Shelf off Argentina and Uruguay (33–55 °S) and b) the South Sandwich and South Shetland Islands (57–62 °S). The first group (n= 59) presumably representing “ vivipara ” and the second “ pentactis ” (n= 26). Specimens from South Georgia were excluded from the analysis as this locality may represent a zone of overlap of the two species. We performed ANCOVA (Analysis of Covariance) analyses with region as the categorical variable and disc diameter as the co-variant, as both arm and arm-spine number are potentially related to animal size. We rejected the null hypothesis (no difference between groups, p=0.000) for both arm number and arm spine number (Fig. 1 A & B). Animals from the Patagonian Shelf (“ vivipara ”) had 6–7 (rarely 8) arms while those from further south (“ pentactis ”) had 5–6. Patagonian Shelf specimens tended to have more arm spines at any given disc diameter, however, the maximum arm spine number (n= 11) was the same for both forms. In summary, there is no simple dichotomous character to distinguish 6 -armed specimens of the two forms. This makes the identity of specimens from South Georgia problematic, as 26 of the 27 specimens examined from there had 6 arms (the last 7). However, many had relatively few arm spines at small to medium disc diameters and so appear to fit the profile of “ pentactis ” rather than “ vivipara ” (Fig. 1 C), although the data is not conclusive and needs to be confirmed with a molecular study. Consequently the final identity of Bernasconi & d'Agostino “ ingrata ” specimens remains uncertain as both O. vivipara and O. pentactis are possibly present at South Georgia. However, “ Ophiacantha ingrata ” (as distinct from Ophiomitrella ingrata ) can be removed from the list of species known from the region. : Published as part of Brogger, Martin I. & O'Hara, Timothy D., 2015, Revision of some ophiuroid records (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) from Argentina, pp. 432-440 in Zootaxa 3972 (3) on pages 432-435, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3972.3.8, http://zenodo.org/record/242685 : {"references": ["Ljungman, A. V. (1871) Om tvanne nya arter Ophiurider. Ofversigt af Kongl. Vetenskaps-Akademiens Forhandlingar, Stockholm, 27 (5), 471 - 475. [1870]", "Lyman, T. (1878) Ophiuridae and Astrophytidae of the exploring voyage of H. M. S. Challenger, under Prof. Sir Wyville Thomson, F. R. S. Part 1. Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard University, 5, 65 - 168, pls 1 - 10.", "Lyman, T. (1882) Ophiuroidea. Report on the Scientific Results of the Voyage of the Challenger Zoology, 5, 1 - 385, pls. 1 - 48.", "Studer, T. (1882) Ubersicht uber die Ophiuriden, welche wahrend der Reise S. M. S. Gazelle um die Erde 1874 - 1876 gesammelt wurden. Abhandlungen der Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, 1, 1 - 37, pls. 1 - 3.", "Koehler, R. (1907) Revision de la collection des Ophiures du Museum d'Histoire Naturelle Paris. Bulletin Scientique de la France et de la Belgique, 41, 279 - 351, pls. 10 - 14.", "Koehler, R. (1908) Asteries, ophiures et echinides de l'Expedition Antarctique Nationale Ecossaise. Report on the Scientific Results of the Voyage of the S. Y. Scotia Zoology, 13, 193 - 313, 16 pls.", "Koehler, R. (1914) A contribution to the study of ophiurans of the United States National Museum. Bulletin of the United States National Museum, 84, 1 - 173, pls. 1 - 18. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.5479 / si. 03629236.84.1", "Koehler, R. (1922) Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea. Scientific Reports. Australasian Antarctic Expedition, Series C, 8, 1 - 98, pls. 76 - 90.", "Mortensen, T. (1936) Echinoidea and Ophiuroidea. Discovery Reports, 12, 199 - 348, 9 pls.", "Bernasconi, I. (1965) Ophiuroidea de Puerto Deseado (Santa Cruz, Argentina). Physis, Seccion A (Buenos Aires), 25, 143 - 152.", "Castillo-Alarcon, J. G. (1968) Contribucion al conocimiento de los Ofiuroideos chilenos. Gayana Zoologica, 14, 1 - 63, 6 pls.", "Bernasconi, I. (1973) Los equinodermos colectados por el ' Walther Herwig'. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales, 3, 287 - 334, 7 pls.", "Bernasconi, I. & d'Agostino, M. M. (1977) Ofiuroideos del Mar Epicontinental Argentino. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales, 5, 65 - 114, 11 pls.", "Lucchi, C. (1985) Ophiuroidea (Echinodermata) del frente maritimo uruguayo hasta 800 m de profundidad, con claves para su identificacion. Contribuciones del Departamanto de Oceanografia (F. H. C.) Montevideo, 2, 115 - 171.", "Bernasconi, I. & d'Agostino, M. M. (1975 b) Equinodermos Antarticos. III Ofiuroideos. 2) Ofiuroideos de Georgias del Sur. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales, 5, 3 - 23, 3 pls.", "Bernasconi, I. & d'Agostino, M. M. (1978) Equinodermos Antarticos. III Ofiuroideos. 3) Ofiuroideos de Sandwich del Sur y Georgias del Sur. Revista del Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales, 5, 203 - 218, 4 pls.", "Tommasi, L. R., Castro, S. M. de & Sousa, E. C. P. M. de (1988) Echinodermata coletados durante as campanhas oceanograficas do N / Oc. \" Almirante Saldanha \" no Atlantico Sul Ocidental. Relatorio Interno do Instituto Oceanografico Universidade de Sao Paulo, 21, 1 - 11.", "Koehler, R. (1923) Asteries et Ophiures recueillies par l'Expedition Antarctique Suedoise (1901 - 1903). In: Further Zoological Results of the Swedish Antarctic Expedition (1901 - 1903), 1, pp. 1 - 145.", "O'Hara, T. D. (1990) New records of Ophiuridae, Ophiacanthidae and Ophiocomidae (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) from south-eastern Australia. Memoirs of the Museum of Victoria, 50, 287 - 305, 2 figs.", "Koehler, R. (1912) Echinodermes (Asteries, Ophiures et Echinides). In: Deuxieme Expedition Antarctique Francaise (1908 - 10), Paris, pp. 272, 16 pls.", "Madsen, F. J. (1955) Echinoderms other than holothurians collected in sub-antarctic and antarctic seas, mainly by the Norvegia Expeditions 1928 - 30. Scientific Research, Norwegian Antarctic Expedition, 37, 1 - 17.", "Bell, F. J. (1908) Echinodermata. In: National Antarctic Expedition 1901 - 1904. Natural History, 4, pp. 1 - 16, 5 pls. Bernasconi, I. (1926) Una ofiura vivipara de Necochea. Anales del Museo Nacional de Historia Natural de Buenos Aires, 34, 145 - 153.", "Martin-Ledo, R., Sands, C. J. & Lopez-Gonzalez, P. J. (2013) A new brooding species of brittle star (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) from Antarctic waters. Polar Biology, 36, 115 - 126. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1007 / s 00300 - 012 - 1242 - z", "Williams, S. T. (2000) Species boundaries in the starfish genus Linckia. Marine Biology, 136, 137 - 148. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1007 / s 002270050016", "Madsen, F. J. (1967) Ophiuroidea. Report of the British, Australian and New Zealand Antarctic Research Expedition 1929 - 1931, 9, 123 - 144, figs. 1 - 8, pl. 1.", "McKnight, D. G. (1967 b) Echinoderms from Cape Hallet, Ross Sea. New Zealand Journal of Marine and Freshwater Research, 1, 314 - 323. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1080 / 00288330.1967.9515207", "O'Hara, T. D., Rowden, A. A. & Williams, A. (2008) Cold-water coral habitats on seamounts: do they have a specialist fauna? Diversity and Distributions, 14, 925 - 934. http: // dx. doi. org / 10.1111 / j. 1472 - 4642.2008.00495. x", "Studer, T. (1876) Uber Echinodermen aus dem antarktischen Meere und zwei neue Seeigel von den Papua-Inseln, gesammelt auf der Reise S. M. S. Gazelle um die Erde. Monatsbericht der Koniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, 1876, 452 - 465."]}
format Text
author Brogger, Martin I.
O'Hara, Timothy D.
author_facet Brogger, Martin I.
O'Hara, Timothy D.
author_sort Brogger, Martin I.
title Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871
title_short Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871
title_full Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871
title_fullStr Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871
title_full_unstemmed Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871
title_sort ophiacantha vivipara ljungman 1871
publisher Zenodo
publishDate 2015
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106870
https://zenodo.org/record/6106870
long_lat ENVELOPE(141.378,141.378,-66.787,-66.787)
ENVELOPE(3.358,3.358,-54.422,-54.422)
ENVELOPE(-58.250,-58.250,-63.917,-63.917)
ENVELOPE(-68.000,-68.000,-68.500,-68.500)
ENVELOPE(-63.567,-63.567,-64.850,-64.850)
ENVELOPE(-44.717,-44.717,-60.750,-60.750)
ENVELOPE(-36.509,-36.509,-54.281,-54.281)
ENVELOPE(6.662,6.662,63.003,63.003)
ENVELOPE(70.334,70.334,-49.564,-49.564)
ENVELOPE(-57.350,-57.350,-63.283,-63.283)
geographic Antarctic
Ross Sea
Patagonia
San Juan
Kerguelen
Sandwich Islands
South Sandwich Islands
South Shetland Islands
Pacific
New Zealand
Argentino
Argentina
Uruguay
Marguerite
Bouvet
Gonzalez
Marguerite Bay
Lopez
Orcadas
Grytviken
Hallet
Shag Rock
Necochea
geographic_facet Antarctic
Ross Sea
Patagonia
San Juan
Kerguelen
Sandwich Islands
South Sandwich Islands
South Shetland Islands
Pacific
New Zealand
Argentino
Argentina
Uruguay
Marguerite
Bouvet
Gonzalez
Marguerite Bay
Lopez
Orcadas
Grytviken
Hallet
Shag Rock
Necochea
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Antarctique*
Antarktis*
antartic*
North Atlantic
Ross Sea
South Sandwich Islands
South Shetland Islands
Shag Rock
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Antarctique*
Antarktis*
antartic*
North Atlantic
Ross Sea
South Sandwich Islands
South Shetland Islands
Shag Rock
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op_rights Open Access
Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal
https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode
cc0-1.0
info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
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op_doi https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106870
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spelling ftdatacite:10.5281/zenodo.6106870 2023-05-15T13:46:15+02:00 Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman 1871 Brogger, Martin I. O'Hara, Timothy D. 2015 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106870 https://zenodo.org/record/6106870 unknown Zenodo http://zenodo.org/record/242685 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC02F50FFE704264E541C05272DFFB0 http://zoobank.org/4B9F402C-5B32-45C0-BBD4-0438179F0674 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit https://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3972.3.8 http://zenodo.org/record/242685 http://publication.plazi.org/id/FFC02F50FFE704264E541C05272DFFB0 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.242686 http://zoobank.org/4B9F402C-5B32-45C0-BBD4-0438179F0674 https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106871 https://zenodo.org/communities/biosyslit Open Access Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/legalcode cc0-1.0 info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess CC0 Biodiversity Taxonomy Animalia Echinodermata Ophiuroidea Ophiurida Ophiacanthidae Ophiacantha Ophiacantha vivipara article-journal ScholarlyArticle Taxonomic treatment Text 2015 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106870 https://doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3972.3.8 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.242686 https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6106871 2022-04-01T10:40:26Z Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman, 1871 (Fig. 1) Ophiacantha vivipara Ljungman, 1871: 471.— Lyman, 1878: 149.— Lyman, 1882: 185 –186, pl. 46 (7–9).— Studer, 1882: 23 – 24.— Koehler, 1907: 321 –323 (in part).— Koehler, 1908: 276.— Koehler, 1914: 96.— Koehler, 1922: 12 –13.— Mortensen, 1936: 246 –248, fig. 5 a, pl. 7 (2).— Bernasconi, 1965: 151 –152.— Castillo-Alarcón, 1968: 45 –47, fig. R, pl. 1 (4,6).— Bernasconi, 1973: 331 –332.— Bernasconi & d'Agostino, 1977: 107 –109, pl. 10 (3,4).— Lucchi, 1985: 133 –134, fig. 49–50. Ophiacantha ingrata .— Bernasconi & d'Agostino, 1975 b: 19 –21, pl. 1 (3 –4).— Bernasconi & d'Agostino, 1978: 217 [Non Ophiomitrella ingrata Koehler, 1908]. ? Ophiacantha vivipara .— Tommasi et al. , 1988: 6. Material examined . Argentina . Isla de los Estados (between Cabo San Juan and Punta Fallows), 54 ° 45.677´S, 63 ° 49.114´W, 54 m, 1934, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 21956, n= 3). East of Isla de los Estados, 54 ° 47´S, 63 ° 35´W, 144 m, 1933 (MACN 22277, 13). 38 ° 31´S, 55 ° 42´W, 109 m, 1938, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 23346, 3). 39 ° 28´S, 57 ° 2´W, 90 m, 1941, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 25122, 5). 12 miles east from Punta Médanos Lighthouse, 39 ° 30´S – 40 ° 11´S, 109 m, 1924, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1977) (MACN 14423, 15). Océano Atlántico Sur, 54 ° 52´S, 37 ° 28´W (MACN 28128, 3). M 2: stn E 9, off Mar del Plata, 38 ° 50.91´S, 55 ° 34.585´W, 140 m, 2009 (MACN, 15). Walther Herwig: stn 277, 40 ° 54´S, 56 ° 49´W, 300 m, identified by Bernasconi (1973) (MACN 27263, 1). South Georgia . Grytviken, 54 ° 16.905´S, 36 ° 30.394´W, 0 m, 1933, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 26927, 12). Puerto Larsen, 25–27 m, 1929, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 18768, 1). Bahía Antartica, 35–36 m, 1929, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 18760, 21). Islas Orcadas: stn 18, Georgias del Sur, 54 ° 21´S, 36 ° 1´W, 106 m, 1975, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1978) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 28139, 4). South Sandwich Is . Islas Orcadas: stn 21, Sandwich del Sur, 57 ° 47´S, 26 ° 26´W, 105 m, 1975, identified by Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1978) as Ophiacantha ingrata (MACN 28127, 2). South Shetland Is . 61 ° 26´S, 56 ° 25´W, 1975 (MACN 34933, 25). Distribution . Malvinas / Falkland Islands, South Georgia, Patagonia to Uruguay (north to 37 °S), Chile (north to 50 °S), Brazil? Macquarie Ridge, 0–1100 m. Remarks . Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b, 1978) record a series of specimens from South Georgia and South Sandwich Islands under the name “ Ophiacantha ingrata (Koehler, 1923) ”. This is an invalid name, as Koehler did not describe a species under this name in 1923, but included photographs of both five and six-armed specimens under the previously described Ophioripa ingrata Koehler, 1908. The five-armed individuals (Koehler 1923, pl. 14, fig 5–6) have the characteristic small rounded granules and thick blunt arm spines found on the holotype of O. ingrata , which has been subsequently transferred to the genus Ophiomitrella (see O’Hara 1990). Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) are possibly correct in identifying as a separate species the small (<6 mm d.d.) six-armed specimen photographed by Koehler (1923, pl. 14, fig 5–6), with its even covering of small conical spinelets, but they are in error to re-use the specific epithet ( ingrata ) in a separate genus ( Ophiacantha ) and then attribute this name to Koehler (1923) (who actually considered both photographs to represent the same species). Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b) noted the similarity of their material to the widespread species Ophiacantha vivipara , distinguishing the two species by the number of arm spines, 7–8 in “ O. ingrata ” and 10–12 in similar sized (16 mm d.d.) O. vivipara . In their synonymy of “ ingrata ”, they included a photo of a six-armed specimen from Marguerite Bay, Antarctica attributed to O. vivipara by Koehler (1912, pl. 11, fig. 2). Koehler (1912) also included a photograph of a similar looking five-armed individual (pl. 11, fig. 1). Mortensen (1936) interpreted these photographs differently. He considered the six-armed specimen to represent O. vivipara and described the five armed form as a separate variety O. vivipara var pentactis which he also distinguished on the basis of reproduction (the presence of males in pentactis ) and biogeography (no five armed specimens occur on the Patagonian Shelf), but not arm spine number. Ophiacantha pentactis was subsequently raised to species rank by Madsen (1955). Fell (1961) found no difference in arm spine number (11–12) or disc spines between his six- and five-armed specimens from the Ross Sea. The true identity of Ophiacantha vivipara is complicated by the uncertainty over the type locality. Ljungman (1871) recorded it from Altata off the Pacific coast of Mexico, however, this locality has been rejected by a series of authors and the presumed locality is now considered to be the Malvinas / Falkland Islands (Bell 1908; Fell 1961). There have been two molecular studies that have shed light on the phylogenetic relationships within the Ophiacantha vivipara complex. Martin-Ledo et al. (2013) found several distinct phylogenetic clades from around Shag Rock near South Georgia that they identify as O. vivipara , O. pentactis , the five-armed O. densispina Mortensen, 1936, a new five-armed species O. wolfarntzi , and an undescribed five-armed species (sp. 1). O’Hara et al. (2013, 2014) found three clades within O. vivipara and several others which were similar to the five-armed O. rosea Lyman, 1878. The three clades of “ vivipara ” had separate distributions: ‘A’ was predominantly circum- Antarctic, ‘B’ was subantarctic and ‘C’ occurred mainly around southern Australia and New Zealand. Clade A included both five and six-armed individuals, the others only six-armed forms. A direct comparison of the COI sequences (O’Hara unpublished data) has revealed that clade A is the same as the clade identified by Martin-Ledo et al. (2013) as O. pentactis and B as O. vivipara . In summary, there are at least three clades with six-armed forms (as well as numerous clades with only fivearmed individuals) within this complex. One clade (clade B of O’Hara et al. 2013 and the vivipara of Martin-Ledo et al. 2013) is known to occur on the Patagonian Shelf, South Georgia and the Macquarie Ridge. Presumably this clade is the one that also occurs further north along the Argentinean coast to Uruguay and in the fjords of southern Chile (although this should be checked with genetic data). It may also occur on other subantarctic islands. The second clade (clade A of O’Hara et al. 2013 and pentactis of Martin-Ledo et al. 2013) is circumpolar Antarctic as well as occurring around South Georgia (Martin-Ledo et al. 2013), South Orkney and Bouvet Islands, and on the southern Macquarie Ridge (O’Hara et al. 2013). It appears to include both five and six-armed individuals, although this should be confirmed with a study using faster evolving genetic loci than COI which is known to be unable to discriminate some echinoderm species pairs (Williams 2000). The third clade (clade C of O’Hara et al. 2013) occurs on seamounts around southern Australia and New Zealand and along the northern Macquarie Ridge. A plausible hypothesis is that these clades represent O. vivipara , O. pentactis and an undescribed Ophiacantha species respectively. Thus many of the records from Antarctica previously considered O. vivipara (e.g. Bell 1908; Koehler 1912, 1922; Fell 1961; Madsen 1967; McKnight 1967 b) are six-armed O. pentactis specimens, and records from Australia and New Zealand (O’Hara et al. 2008) are an undescribed species. The identity of specimens found in other regions remains unclear. No genetic sequences are currently available from specimens collected around Crozet, Marion, Kerguelen or Heard Islands. Specimens from around Kerguelen are frequently seven armed and may be “ vivipara ” (although the name Ophiacantha kerguelensis Studer, 1876 is available if specimens from this remote location form a distinct clade). Northern records, such as those found off Brazil (Tommasi 1970; Tommasi et al. , 1988), need to be critically compared with the six-armed Ophiacantha anomala Sars, 1871 from the North Atlantic. To test whether arm number or maximum arm spine number varied between the two western hemisphere clades as suggested by Mortensen (1936) and Bernasconi & d'Agostino (1975 b), we compared the abundant material in the MACN from two regions: a) the Patagonian Shelf off Argentina and Uruguay (33–55 °S) and b) the South Sandwich and South Shetland Islands (57–62 °S). The first group (n= 59) presumably representing “ vivipara ” and the second “ pentactis ” (n= 26). Specimens from South Georgia were excluded from the analysis as this locality may represent a zone of overlap of the two species. We performed ANCOVA (Analysis of Covariance) analyses with region as the categorical variable and disc diameter as the co-variant, as both arm and arm-spine number are potentially related to animal size. We rejected the null hypothesis (no difference between groups, p=0.000) for both arm number and arm spine number (Fig. 1 A & B). Animals from the Patagonian Shelf (“ vivipara ”) had 6–7 (rarely 8) arms while those from further south (“ pentactis ”) had 5–6. Patagonian Shelf specimens tended to have more arm spines at any given disc diameter, however, the maximum arm spine number (n= 11) was the same for both forms. In summary, there is no simple dichotomous character to distinguish 6 -armed specimens of the two forms. This makes the identity of specimens from South Georgia problematic, as 26 of the 27 specimens examined from there had 6 arms (the last 7). However, many had relatively few arm spines at small to medium disc diameters and so appear to fit the profile of “ pentactis ” rather than “ vivipara ” (Fig. 1 C), although the data is not conclusive and needs to be confirmed with a molecular study. Consequently the final identity of Bernasconi & d'Agostino “ ingrata ” specimens remains uncertain as both O. vivipara and O. pentactis are possibly present at South Georgia. However, “ Ophiacantha ingrata ” (as distinct from Ophiomitrella ingrata ) can be removed from the list of species known from the region. : Published as part of Brogger, Martin I. & O'Hara, Timothy D., 2015, Revision of some ophiuroid records (Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea) from Argentina, pp. 432-440 in Zootaxa 3972 (3) on pages 432-435, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3972.3.8, http://zenodo.org/record/242685 : {"references": ["Ljungman, A. V. (1871) Om tvanne nya arter Ophiurider. Ofversigt af Kongl. Vetenskaps-Akademiens Forhandlingar, Stockholm, 27 (5), 471 - 475. 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Monatsbericht der Koniglich Preussischen Akademie der Wissenschaften zu Berlin, 1876, 452 - 465."]} Text Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Antarctique* Antarktis* antartic* North Atlantic Ross Sea South Sandwich Islands South Shetland Islands Shag Rock DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Antarctic Ross Sea Patagonia San Juan Kerguelen Sandwich Islands South Sandwich Islands South Shetland Islands Pacific New Zealand Argentino Argentina Uruguay Marguerite ENVELOPE(141.378,141.378,-66.787,-66.787) Bouvet ENVELOPE(3.358,3.358,-54.422,-54.422) Gonzalez ENVELOPE(-58.250,-58.250,-63.917,-63.917) Marguerite Bay ENVELOPE(-68.000,-68.000,-68.500,-68.500) Lopez ENVELOPE(-63.567,-63.567,-64.850,-64.850) Orcadas ENVELOPE(-44.717,-44.717,-60.750,-60.750) Grytviken ENVELOPE(-36.509,-36.509,-54.281,-54.281) Hallet ENVELOPE(6.662,6.662,63.003,63.003) Shag Rock ENVELOPE(70.334,70.334,-49.564,-49.564) Necochea ENVELOPE(-57.350,-57.350,-63.283,-63.283)