Endoxocrinus (Endoxocrinus) parrae prionodes ( H.L. Clark, 1941 )

David, Jerome, Roux, Michel, Messing, Charles G. & Ameziane, Nadia, 2006, Revision of the pentacrinid stalked crinoids of the genus Endoxocrinus (Echinodermata, Crinoidea), with a study of environmental control of characters and its consequences for taxonomy, Zootaxa 1156, pp. 1-50 : 36

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.5281/zenodo.172265

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6260993

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/467B4160-FFB1-FB41-FE96-68CF5A87023B

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Endoxocrinus (Endoxocrinus) parrae prionodes ( H.L. Clark, 1941 )
status

 

Endoxocrinus (Endoxocrinus) parrae prionodes ( H.L. Clark, 1941)

Figures 4 View FIGURE 4 b, 5c.

Synonymy: Endoxocrinus prionodes H.L. Clark, 1941: 6 ; Endoxocrinus parrae Meyer et al., 1978 (pars): 424; Endoxocrinus parrae (phenotype PR) Oji, 1990a: 603, 1996: 340–341; Endoxocrinus parrae Messing et al., 1990: 19 ; Endoxocrinus (Endoxocrinus) mülleri var. prionodes David, 1998: 203 (unpublished data); Endoxocrinus (Endoxocrinus) prionodes Roux et al. 2002: 820 .

Diagnosis

A relatively gracile subspecies of E. parrae with up to 46 (mode 30) usually serrated arms up to 125 mm long (mean 99 mm); number of IIIBr 2–5 (mode 3); stalk length up to 50.5 cm (mean 23.5 cm); proximalmost stalk diameter up to 5 mm (mean 4.1 mm); proximal cirri remaining rudimentary before the 6th nodal; internodal thickness and width regular; number of internodals per noditaxis up to 16 (mean 12); nodals with ratio of height to diameter 0.51–0.52; cryptosymplexies with a slight inner symmorphy of interpetaloid zones; number of cirrals per cirrus up to 38 (mode 30), fewer than in the two other subspecies.

Type locality

Off northern coast of Santa Clara Province, Cuba, at a depth of 482 m. Holotype: Catalogue no. MCZ 1000, Museum of Comparative Zoology, Harvard College, Cambridge, Massachusetts; first figured by H.L. Clark 1941, pl. 1.

Occurrence

From the northwestern Bahamas to the eastern end of Hispaniola, off northern and southern Cuba, at depths from 402 m to 832 m (David 1998); greater abundance in the northwestern Bahamas (Oji 1990) probably related to the relatively high number of dredges and submersible dives in this area.

MCZ

Museum of Comparative Zoology

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