Abstract
The family Zoroasteridae is a clade of extant sea stars found exclusively in deep marine environments (i.e. bathyal environments deeper than 200 m). In the fossil record, seven species have been compared and/or assigned to the Zoroasteridae, on a time span ranging from the Middle Jurassic to the Miocene. This study describes a new taxon, Viridisaster guerangeri gen. et sp. nov., from the Cenomanian of Le Mans (Sarthe, France) and reappraises two Mesozoic species, the Jurassic Terminaster cancriformis and the Early Cretaceous Protothyraster priscus. To test the relationships of the putative fossil zoroasterids with modern taxa, a phylogenetic analysis was performed combining six of the best-known fossil species and 29 forcipulatacean species, including four Zoroasteridae. Many of the characters that define the extant Zoroasteridae do not appear in the fossil record before the Cenozoic. The family name is maintained for the crown group only. The family Terminasteridae, that accounted for the genera Terminaster and Alkaidia, is found paraphyletic and is rejected here. The order Zorocallida, initially erected for the family Zoroasteridae only, is redefined as the sister clade to the Forcipulatida that includes the crown-group Zoroasteridae and its stem relatives. Mesozoic Zorocallida are small in size compared to the Cenozoic Zorocallida, and they express morphological characters that are typical of juvenile Zoroasteridae; thus, the emergence of modern forms is likely associated with peramorphic evolution. The palaeoecology of the Zoroasteridae and their restriction to deep-sea environments after the Eocene is discussed.
http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:1755AFC6-198F-45F2-A2F6-011EAC6BE10F
Acknowledgements
The authors are grateful to the collection managers who facilitated access to the specimens: Nicolas Morel (MHNLM); Walter Etter and Sergio Kühni (NMB Basel); Timothy A. M. Ewin (NHMUK); Christian Meister (MHNG); Marc Eléaume and Pierre Lozouet (MNHN); Eric A. Lazo-Wasem and Lourdes Rojas (YPM). We thank the two anonymous reviewers for their comments that helped improve the manuscript. Marine Fau received financial support from the Department of Geosciences of Fribourg University during the period 2016–2020, and received a grant from the program Synthesys (GB-TAF-6581) for a visit to the Natural History Museum, London, in June 2017.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).
Supplemental material
Supplemental material for this article can be accessed here: https://doi.org/10.1080/14772019.2023.2243268.
Associate Editor: Tim Ewin