Labidiaster radiosus explained

Labidiaster radiosus, the fragile sticky ray star, is a large species of starfish in the family Heliasteridae and was first described by Lütken in 1871.[1] It is found in the waters of southern South America to Sub-Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula.[2]

Description

Labidiaster radiosus is a large starfish that can reach up to 400NaN0 across, its color is variable in life, ranging from red-orange to purple andwhite.[3] It has a round abdomen with 20-40 arms, often has a pattern of concentric circles radiating out on arms. Labidiaster radiosus may be confused with Labidiaster annulatus and the two have even been considered to be the same species. However, they can be distinguished by closely examining the pedicellaria in the central disc.

Distribution

Labidiaster radiosus is found on rocky reefs in the waters of southern South America to Sub-Antarctica and the Antarctic Peninsula. it lives at depths of 5-450m with a sea temperature range of 1.70NaN0-11.20NaN0.[4]

Reproduction

Embryos will hatch into planktonic larvae which later metamorphose into pentamerous juveniles. These develop into young sea stars with short, stubby arms.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Labidiaster radiosus . 178810 . 7 December 2021.
  2. Web site: Labidiaster radiosus - Species - Antarctic Field Guides. 2021-12-04. afg.biodiversity.aq.
  3. Book: Asteroidea - Starfish . Erika Mutschke & Chris Mah . 823,830 . 4 December 2021.
  4. Web site: Labidiaster radiosus - Fragile Sticky Ray Star. 2021-12-04. reeflifesurvey.com. en-AU.
  5. Web site: Labidiaster radiosus . Sea Life Base . Sea Life Base . 4 December 2021.