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Daisy Brittle Star, Crevice Brittle Star

Echinoderm

Daisy Brittle Star, Crevice Brittle Star

Ophiopholis aculeata (Linnaeus, 1767)

WoRMS AphialID

125125

Sample IDs

Collected

Southern Shore NS, Eastern Shore NS, Les Escoumins QC, SCUBA hand collection on boulders, cobbles and sand with seaweed, 10-20 m depth.

Distinguishing Features

• Aboral: disc spinose and granular except for the distinct radial central plates, radial shields are absent.
• Oral: 3 pairs of oral papillae, and elliptical oral shields that are much wider than long.
• Arms: dorsal arm plates are transversely oval and surrounded by single series of smaller plates. The spines are robust, erect, with 5-6 per joint on the outer part of the arm and the lowest arm spine is hooked.
• Size: disc to 20 mm diameter and arm radius to 88 mm.

Habitat

Rock crevices, 0-300 m depth.

Geographic Range

Circumpolar distribution from the Arctic to Cape Cod, Greenland and Europe in the North Atlantic and from the Bering Sea to California and Japan in the North Pacific.

Fun Fact

A common name for brittle stars is “serpent stars,” which comes from their unique movement. While common sea stars rely on their tube feet to move slowly along the sea floor, brittle stars are highly active and quick by wriggling their long arms in a snake-like motion.

Barcode Distribution

Matching large Atlantic and Pacific BIN.

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