Overview

Comprehensive Description

Description

 A feather-star with five pairs of feathery arms, 5-10 cm in length. The species is secured to the substratum by movable, claw-like cirri, up to about 25, on the undersurface of the disc. The animal is thus able to crawl, often quite swiftly. The colour of Antedon bifida is varied, red, pink, orange or yellow, often mottled or banded.Antedon bifida may be confused with another feather-star species Antedon petasus which has a more northerly distribution around the British Isles. Antedon petasus is larger and has 50 or so short cirri on the undersurface of the disc.
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Description

This feather star has ten thin pinnate arms with side-branches like a feather. There are about 25 short cirri arising around the central plate on the underside of the disc which curl under to anchor the animal to the substratum. The cirri are banded and the arms usually pink or red with white pinnules. The arm segments or brachials are thickened at their outer edges giving a ridged lower profile to the arm. Arms typically 5cm in length. Antedon petasus is very similar but larger than this species.
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Distribution

Distribution

Sublitoral, from low intertidal to more than 100 m, often clinging to rocks, etc. in places with strong currents.
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Distribution

Atlantic Coast of France, Azores, Azores Exclusive Economic Zone, British Isles, Caribbean Sea, Dutch Exclusive Economic Zone, English Channel, European waters (ERMS scope), Irish Exclusive economic Zone, Manche, Portugal, Portugese Exclusive Economic Zone, Shetlands, United Kingdom, United Kingdom Exclusive Economic Zone, Venezuela, West Africa
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Distribution

Found on western and north-eastern coasts of the British Isles.
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Ecology

Habitat

Depth range based on 355 specimens in 2 taxa.
Water temperature and chemistry ranges based on 69 samples.

Environmental ranges
  Depth range (m): 0 - 168
  Temperature range (°C): 8.933 - 24.963
  Nitrate (umol/L): 2.032 - 9.243
  Salinity (PPS): 34.692 - 35.504
  Oxygen (ml/l): 4.299 - 6.478
  Phosphate (umol/l): 0.333 - 0.682
  Silicate (umol/l): 2.311 - 5.963

Graphical representation

Depth range (m): 0 - 168

Temperature range (°C): 8.933 - 24.963

Nitrate (umol/L): 2.032 - 9.243

Salinity (PPS): 34.692 - 35.504

Oxygen (ml/l): 4.299 - 6.478

Phosphate (umol/l): 0.333 - 0.682

Silicate (umol/l): 2.311 - 5.963
 
Note: this information has not been validated. Check this *note*. Your feedback is most welcome.
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Habitat

 Antedon bifida is found from the shallow sublittoral to depths of 450 m but is most abundant between 15 and 40 m (La Touche, 1978). It is occasionally observed at the level of the lowest spring tides. It is free-moving but is usually found clinging by its cirri to the walls of gullies and on seaweeds in areas of fast flowing water currents.
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Habitat

Found in a variety of habitats both sheltered and moderately exposed, attached to rocks, algae, and sedentary animals. Antedon bifida often occurs in large numbers and may dominate areas of rock in suitable habitats.
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Associations

Associations

Animal / parasite / ectoparasite
adult of Balcis devians ectoparasitises Antedon bifida

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Life History and Behavior

Behavior

Breeding

Eggs, attached to genital pinnules, hatch to barrel-shaped ciliated larva; settlement stage is pentacrinoid. All seasons?
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Wikipedia

Antedon bifida

Antedon bifida is a species of crinoid in the family Antedonidae commonly known as the rosy feather star. It is found in north west Europe.

Contents

Description

The body of A. bifida is a concave disc surrounded by ten pinnately divided arms giving it a fern-like appearance. The mouth and ambulacral grooves are on the upper surface of the disc. The arms can be up to 10cm (4in) long but are usually shorter than this. The undersides of the arms have prominent transverse ridges and some have modifications for feeding and reproduction. The pinnules are jointed, have about 35 segments and bear unequal sized tube feet in groups of three. The arm colour is variable, ranging from yellow or pink to deep purple, sometimes spotted or blotched, and the pinnules are usually paler or white. There are about twenty short cirri, banded and arranged in transverse rows on a central raised ossicle. These curl under and grasp the surface enabling the animal to crawl around which it can do with great rapidity. It may be confused with the rather similar Antedon petasus but that species is usually larger with up to 50 cirri, looks neater and does not have ridges on the undersides of its arms.[2][3][4]

Distribution and habitat

A. bifida is primarily found on the coasts of north west Europe, the range extending from the Shetland Islands south to Portugal.[2] It has also been reported from Algeria, Tunisia, West Africa and Venezuela.[1] Around the British Isles it is found on north eastern and on western coasts. It occurs from the low tide mark to a depth of about 200m (650ft) and occasionally much deeper. It is often associated with other crinoids and bryozoans [2] and may dominate its habitat. It moves from place to place, clinging to rocks, seaweed and molluscs with its clawed cirri. It favours areas with strong currents in both sheltered and fairly exposed positions and is often found in gullies.[3][4]

Biology

A. bifida is a suspension feeder, catching detritus and plankton with its pinnules as they float past. Larger particles are captured and held by the two larger tube feet of each group of three. Small particles adhere to the mucus they extrude and the smaller third foot helps to bundle these together to form a bolus. The food is then transferred to the ambulacral groove where it is moved towards the mouth by the current created by the cilia that line the groove.[5] As well as crawling around, this feather star can swim short distances by flapping its arms.[6]

A. bifida is dioecious, each individual being either male or female. Gametes are produced, mostly between May and July, from the genital canals found at the base of some arms. The eggs stick to the outside of the pinnules where fertilisation takes place. The female produces a mucus net and protects the developing embryos by holding her arms together in what is described as brooding behaviour. After about five days, the eggs hatch into free-swimming larvae which soon settle on a solid surface and attach themselves with a short stalk. Now known as pentacrinoid larvae, they have a similar feeding system to that of the adults.[5] Eventually they develop clawed cirri and become detached from their stalks, reaching maturity in one to two years.[4]

Ecology

A. bifida has a symbiotic relationship with the marine worm, Myzostoma cirriferum. The worm larvae are caught by the tube feet of the feather star and treated like food particles. They attach in the ambulacral grooves of the pinnules where they undergo metamorphosis and mature. They hold on with parapodial hooks and can move about on the host.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c Antedon bifida (Pennant, 1777) World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  2. ^ a b c Feather Star (Antedon bifida) Marine Species Identification Portal. Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  3. ^ a b Antedon bifida (Pennant, 1777) National Museums of Northern Ireland. Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  4. ^ a b c Rosy feather-star - Antedon bifida Marine Life Information Network (MarLIN). Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  5. ^ a b Lahaye, M. C. and M. Jangoux. (1985). "Functional morphology of the podia and ambulacral grooves of the comatulid crinoid Antedon bifida (Echinodermata)". Marine Biology (SpringerLink) 86 (3): 307–18. doi:10.1007/BF00397517. http://www.springerlink.com/content/ktl65164p3r88106/. 
  6. ^ Antedon bifida European Marine Life. Retrieved 2011-10-14.
  7. ^ Eeckhaut, I and M. Jangoux (1993). "Life cycle and mode of infestation of Myzostoma cirriferum (Annelida), a symbiotic myzostomid of the comatulid crinoid Antedon bifida (Echinodermata).". Diseases of Aquatic Organisms 15 (3): 207–217. http://md1.csa.com/partners/viewrecord.php?requester=gs&collection=ENV&recid=2983066&q=Antedon+bifida&uid=791140278&setcookie=yes. 
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