Solaster endeca
{{Short description|Species of starfish}}
{{speciesbox
| image = Solaster endeca 001.jpg
| image_caption =
| taxon = Solaster endeca
| authority = (Linnaeus, 1771) {{cite web|url=http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=124160 |title=WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species - Solaster endeca (Linnaeus, 1771) |publisher=Marinespecies.org |access-date=2012-02-15}}
| synonyms =*Asterias alboverrucosa Brandt, 1835
- Asterias aspera O.F. Müller, 1776
- Asterias endeca Linnaeus, 1771
- Asterias rumphii Parelius, 1768
- Solaster endeca decemradiata Sladen, 1889
- Solaster galaxides Verrill, 1909
- Solaster intermedius Sluiter, 1895
- Stellonia endeca L. Agassiz, 1836
}}
The purple sunstar, northern sunstar, or smooth sun star, Solaster endeca, is a species of starfish in the family Solasteridae.
Description
Solaster endeca can grow to about {{convert|40|cm|abbr=on}} across, but {{convert|20|cm|abbr=on}} a more normal adult size is half that. It is a robust species with 9 or 10 arms (occasionally any number from seven to 13) set around a large disc. The aboral (upper) surface is formed of calcareous plates densely covered with paxillae, peg-like projections covered in tiny spinelets. No pedicellariae are present, but groups of two to three gills are found between the plates. On the oral (under) surface, the row of plates on either side of the ambulacral groove bear two or three spines and several rows of shorter spines, with two rows of tube feet. S. endeca ranges in colour from greyish-cream to pinkish-purple. The arms are often turned up at the tips, showing the pale oral surface.{{cite web |url=http://www.habitas.org.uk/marinelife/species.asp?item=ZB1430 |title=Solaster endeca (Linnaeus, 1771) |author1=Picton, B.E. |author2=Morrow, C.C. |date=2010 |work=Encyclopedia of Marine Life of Britain and Ireland |access-date=2012-10-24}} It can be confused with Crossaster papposus , the only British species with a similar number of arms, but S. endeca has a smoother aboral surface.{{cite web |url=http://www.marlin.ac.uk/speciesinformation.php?speciesID=4345 |title=Purple sun star - Solaster endeca |author=Sonia Rowley |date=2007 |work=Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom |access-date=2012-10-24}}{{cite web |url=http://species-identification.org/species.php?species_group=echinodermata&id=52 |title=Purple Sunstar (Solaster endeca) |work=Macrobenthos of the North Sea - Echinodermata |publisher=Marine Species Identification Portal |access-date=2012-10-24}}
Distribution and habitat
File:Purple sun stars, Boston Aquarium.jpg, Boston]]
The purple sun star occurs in the northeastern Atlantic Ocean and the North Sea at depths to {{convert|450|m|abbr=on}}. Its typical habitats are muddy sand, gravel, or rocky areas with deposited sediment. It is found in both sheltered and fairly exposed locations. It also has a circumboreal distribution and is found round the coasts of Greenland, northeastern Canada, and the East Coast of the United States as far south as the Gulf of Maine. In the Baltic Sea it is a vulnerable species.{{cite journal |author=HELCOM |author-link=HELCOM |year=2013 |title=HELCOM Red List of Baltic Sea species in danger of becoming extinct |journal=Baltic Sea Environmental Proceedings |issue=140 |page=66 |url=http://helcom.fi/Lists/Publications/BSEP140.pdf |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141007002944/http://helcom.fi/Lists/Publications/BSEP140.pdf |archive-date=2014-10-07 }} It also occurs in the northeastern Pacific Ocean between northern Alaska and Puget Sound.{{cite web |url=http://www.seastarsofthepacificnorthwest.info/species/northern_sun_star.html |title=Northern sun star |work=Sea stars of the Pacific Northwest |access-date=2012-10-24}}
Biology
S. endeca is a predator. In the Atlantic Ocean, it feeds on other starfish and bivalve molluscs, but in the Pacific, its diet is mainly sea cucumbers and other invertebrates.
In Britain, breeding takes place in the spring. Over a period of about a week, the female lays several thousand eggs in batches. These rise to the surface of the water where they are fertilised by sperm liberated by the male. The developing larvae become less buoyant after three days, feed on the yolks of their eggs, swim with cilia, and develop a pair of larval arms. After about 18 days, they sink to the sea bed, where each one attaches itself to the substrate with a sucker. Here it undergoes metamorphosis during which it develops a disc and first five and then more arms, a pair of tube feet, relatively long spines, red eyespots on the tips of the arms, a mouth, and an anus. After six weeks, the sucker is resorbed and the juvenile starfish begins to move about with its tube feet.{{cite journal |author=Gemmill, James F |year=1910 |title=The development of the starfish Solaster endeca Forbes (1912) |journal=Transactions of the Zoological Society of London |url=https://archive.org/stream/cu31924002803520#page/n23/mode/2up }}
References
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Category:Echinoderms of the Atlantic Ocean
Category:Echinoderms of the Pacific Ocean