Amphipholis squamata, common names brooding snake star and dwarf brittle star, is a species complex[2][3] of brittle stars in the family Amphiuridae.[4][5][6]
Description
This species is small, grey to bluish-white, and phosphorescent. Brooding individuals emit more light than non-brooding individuals.[7] It has thin, short arms around 20 mm long. The round disc is 3 to 5mm, and has a scale covering with D-shaped radial plates. It has rhombic-shaped mouth shields and extremely wide mouth papillae.
Distribution
Amphipholis squamata is found in all parts of the British Isles and also in Ireland. It has been recorded in many other parts of the world, including France[7],New Zealand and other places, with one conference paper referring to it as a cosmopolitan species.[8] Molecular studies have shown that there are multiple species in this complex.[2][9]
^ abLe Gac, M., Féral, J.P., Poulin, E., Veyret, M. & Chenuil, A. (2004) Identification of allopatric clades in the cosmopolitan ophiuroid species complex Amphipholis squamata (Echinodermata). The end of a paradox? Marine Ecology Progress Series, 278: 171–178.
^Boissin E., Feral J.P., Chenuil A. (2008) Defining reproductively isolated units in a cryptic and syntopic species complex using mitochondrial and nuclear markers: the brooding brittle star, Amphipholis squamata (Ophiuroidea). Mol Ecol 17:1732−1744
^ abDeheyn, D.; Mallefet, J.; Jangoux, M. (1997). "Intraspecific Variations of Bioluminescence in a Polychromatic Population OfAmphipholis Squamata(Echinodermata: Ophiuroidea)". Journal of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom. 77 (4). Cambridge University Press (CUP): 1213–1222. doi:10.1017/s0025315400038728. ISSN0025-3154.
^Sponer, Renate; Roy, Michael S. (2002). "PHYLOGEOGRAPHIC ANALYSIS OF THE BROODING BRITTLE STAR AMPHIPHOLIS SQUAMATA (ECHINODERMATA) ALONG THE COAST OF NEW ZEALAND REVEALS HIGH CRYPTIC GENETIC VARIATION AND CRYPTIC DISPERSAL POTENTIAL". Evolution. 56 (10): 1954–1967. doi:10.1111/j.0014-3820.2002.tb00121.x. ISSN0014-3820.