Fig. 197.—Korethraster hispidus. × 2. (From Wyville Thomson.)
Fam. 3. Asterinidae.—Spinulosa in which the aboral skeleton consists of overlapping plates, each bearing a few small spines. The common British representative of this family is the small Asterina gibbosa, in which the arms are short and stout and of somewhat unequal length. This Starfish differs from most of its allies in being littoral in its habit. At low tide on the south and west coasts of England it can be found on the underside of stones feeding on the Sponges and Ascidians with which they are covered. Like Cribrella sanguinolenta this species has a modified development. The larva resembles that of Cribrella, and the larval stage only lasts about a week. Owing to the fact that Asterina lays its eggs in accessible localities, its development has been more thoroughly worked out than that of any other species. Palmipes membranaceus, an animal of extraordinary thinness and flatness, is sometimes dredged up off the coast of Britain in deeper water. Its arms are so short that the general form is pentagonal. The infero-marginal plates are long and rod-like, and form a conspicuous border to the body when viewed from below.
Fam. 4. Poraniidae.—Spinulosa allied to the Asterinidae but possessing a thick gelatinous body-wall in which the plates and spines are buried, the marginals forming a conspicuous border to the body. This family is represented in British waters only by Porania pulvillus, a cushion-shaped Starfish with very short arms and of a magnificent reddish-purple colour. It is occasionally, but rarely, exposed at low tide.
Fam. 5. Ganeriidae.—Spinulosa allied to the Asterinidae but distinguished by the large marginals and by the fact that the skeleton of the oral surface consists of plates each bearing a few large spines. Ganeria, Marginaster.
Fam. 6. Mithrodiidae.—Spinulosa with a reticulate aboral skeleton. The spines are large and blunt, covered with minute spinules. Mithrodia, sole genus.
These last two families are not represented in British waters.
Order II. Velata.
This is a very extraordinary group of Starfish, about the habits of which nothing is known, since they all live at very considerable depths. Their nearest allies amongst the Spinulosa must be looked for amongst the Solasteridae. If the sheaves of spines with which the latter family are provided were to become adherent at their bases, and connected with webs of skin so as to form umbrella-like structures, and if then these umbrellas were to become united at their edges, we should have a supra-dorsal membrane formed such as is characteristic of the order.
Fam. 1. Pythonasteridae.—Velata in which each sheaf of spines is enveloped in a globular expansion of the skin and is not united with the neighbouring sheaves. Pythonaster, sole genus.