The family Ophidiasteridae Verrill, 1870, with 28 valid genera, is mainly a shallow-water, tropical and subtropical family. The species of that family are a conspicuous feature of the coral reef fauna. Asexual reproduction by fission occurs in a few species, but sexual reproduction, planktotrophic or lecitothrophic larvae, and bipinnaria and/or brachiolaria stages are more common (Mortensen, 1921).
The species of the genus Narcissia Gray, 1840 can be distinguished by a high, more or less pyramidal disk; 5 long, tapering arms that are trigonal in cross-section; 7–13 irregular series of abactinal plates; papulae that are isolated, single or in pairs; mouth plates with large, blunt, compressed spines and abundant, small alveolar pedicellariae with elongate, spoon-shaped valves (Clark & Downey, 1992). There are 4 valid species in the genus. The species N. gracilis A. H. Clark, 1916 is found in the Pacific Ocean; whereas N. canariensis d’Orbigny, 1839; N. trigonaria Sladen, 1889; and N. ahearnae Pawson, 2007 are distributed in the Atlantic Ocean.
Narcissia ahearnae has been reported from Cape Canaveral in Florida, The Bahamas, Grand Cayman, and the British Virgin Islands, at depths ranging from 53 to 135 m. It has conspicuous undulating carinal ridges extending from the center of the disk along the upper surfaces of the arms (Pawson, 2007).
Seven specimens were collected in the Mexican Caribbean (Table 1) during 3 oceanographic cruises (PROIBE III, IV and V) in 1985 and 1986, on board of the Research Vessel “Justo Sierra”, UNAM. The identity of the specimens of N. ahearnae was determined on the basis of the diagnostic characters described in Pawson (2007). In addition, in order to confirm the geographical range of the species, we consulted specialized literature (Alvarado & Solís-Marín, 2013; Pawson, 2007) and checked the information about voucher specimens deposited at the National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, DC (USNM, 2016).
Narcissia ahearnae Pawson, 2007 (Fig. 1).
Specimens are deposited in the Colección Nacional de Equinodermos “Dra. María Elena Caso Muñoz”, Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (ICML-UNAM), since 1985. They were previously misidentified as N. trigonaria.
Description. High, pyramidal disk, 5 long, slender arms more or less triangular in cross-section. At the base, height of arm sometimes equal to breadth of arm, but more commonly up to 1.5× arm breadth. Carinal ridge (Fig. 1) elevated, conspicuously undulating in horizontal and vertical planes from center of disk along arms, approximately to mid-point of each arm. Ridge is 3–4 mm wide, composed of carinal plates along with several series of abactinal plates. Marginal plates conspicuous when a specimen is viewed from above, forming and defining ambitus; marginals covered with granules. Anus slightly off-center, protected by several spatulate spines. Madreporite typical of genus, placed approximately at one-third from apex to inter-radial margin. Abactinal plates vary greatly in size, typically not in regular series; at about mid-point of arm, about 17 abactinal plates traverse abactinal arm surface. Granules on abactinal plates are evenly but closely spaced, discrete, and not forming a mosaic; granules usually short, peg-shaped, about 330 μm high and 200 μm in diameter, tapering distally to blunt to sharp point. Some granules rounded distally, but most are pointed. Papulae single or paired and extremely numerous abactinally in radii and interradii, about 7 papulae per mm2. Papulae also present in small numbers among the actinolateral plates. No pedicellariae were found.
The survey of literature and museum records (Pawson, 2007) indicated that the northernmost record is at Cape Canaveral, Florida (27°26’ N, 78°57’ W), based on a specimen present in the Harbor Branch Oceanographic Museum (HBOM 073:00531). The other record is from The Bahamas (26°32.89’ N, 78°45.29’ W). Figure 2 shows the known records, previous and new, of N. ahearnae.
This report of N. ahearnae in the Mexican Caribbean located 1000 km west of the previously recognized western limit is important as it increases the number of known starfish species present in the Mexican Caribbean to 52 (Alvarado & Solís-Marín, 2013). N. ahearnae differs markedly from its 3 congeners in possessing a prominent, elevated, undulating carinal ridge. The other species distributed in the western Atlantic, N. trigonaria, has a perfectly straight carinal ridge and in life is cream-colored blotched with rust red (Clark & Downey, 1992). In addition, in N. trigonaria the marginal plates are inconspicuous, pedicellariae are very common, the abactinal granules are flattened and angular, forming a mosaic pattern, and there are about 3 papular pores per mm2, while in N. ahearnae the marginal plates are conspicuous and pedicellariae are absent or rare.