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Description The disc is flat, 11
mm diameter. The radial shields are covered. The dorsal surface is covered by
plates, bearing spines/granules, obscured by skin, with a visible diameter of
0.10.45 mm, overlapping or touching; primary plates not visible. Disc
spines or granules of one type, cylindrical or conical, and glassy transparent
shaft, with thorns all over (nearing appearance in lines). The spines are up to
1.53 mm long, and 48 times high as wide; densely distributed.
The ventral interradial surface is with skin-covered plates. The oral shields
are exposed, circular or triangular, longer than wide. The adoral shields are
exposed, extending to lateral edge of oral shield, separated radially, meeting
interradially. Bursal slits extend from the oral shield to the disc margin, not
bordered by spines or papillae. The jaw is as wide as long or wider than long,
with one, pointed or tapering apical papilla, longer than wide. Oral papillae
separated by a gap from apical papillae, pointed, thorned. The oral tentacle
pore is located inside the jaw, with distal oral papilla similar to other oral
papillae or enlarged, and rounded.
The specimen has five arms, unbranched, moniliform, 46 times d.d.
Dorsal arm plates, separated, with spines/granules, clustered on the basal
dorsal arm plates; fan-shaped, and 0.50.7 times long as wide. The second
ventral arm plates are separated from the third plate, fan-shaped, and
0.350.5 times long as wide. Ventral arm plates of the first free segments
separated, fan-shaped, and 0.50.7 times long as wide. Tentacle pores along
the arm, with one scale, covering the pore, leaf-shaped. There are 35 arm
spines on the first ventral segment, 89 on the first free segments. The
spines are erect, extending around to the dorsal surface, longest dorsally, and
45 times as long as one arm segment, pointed or blunt, cylindrical. There
are thorns, in longitudinal series on the surface from the base to the tip of
the spine, all along the spine, glassy rough shaft.
Description exported from Delta key and to be finalised when DNA sampling
completed. Note species description and image characters may vary slightly in
animals of different size within the same species. Cite this publication as: "T O'Hara
(2010). ‘Ophiuroids from deep sea southern Australia. Museum Victoria. Version:
1.0 http://www.museumvictoria.com.au/stars" Information updated 5 February
2010
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