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Revista de Biología Tropical

versión On-line ISSN 0034-7744versión impresa ISSN 0034-7744

Rev. biol. trop vol.63  supl.2 San José jun. 2015

http://dx.doi.org/10.15517/rbt.v63i2.23127 

Artículo

A literature review of the Ophiuroidea (Echinodermata) from the Pacific coast of Mexico

Revisión de literatura de Ophiuroidea (Echinodermata) de las costas del Pacífico de México

Rebeca Granja-Fernández1 

María Dinorah Herrero-Pérezrul2 

Andrés López-Pérez3 

Alejandro Hernández-Morales4 

Pedro Diego Rangel-Solís3 

1Doctorado en Ciencias Biológicas y de la Salud. Universidad Autónoma Metropolitana. San Rafael Atlixco 186, Col. Vicentina. CP 09340. D.F., México; beckygranja@gmail.com

2Centro Interdisciplinario de Ciencias Marinas-Instituto Politécnico Nacional. Depto. de Pesquerías y Biología Marina. Avenida Instituto Politécnico Nacional s/n. Col. Playa Palo de Santa Rita. C.P. 23096. La Paz, Baja California Sur, México; dherrero@ipn.mx

3Departamento de Hidrobiología, División CBS, UAM-Iztapalapa. Av. San Rafael Atlixco 186, Col. Vicentina, CP 09340, AP 55-535. D.F., México; alopez@xanum.uam.mx, diego.rangel.solis@gmail.com

4Programa de Licenciatura en Ecología Marina, Laboratorio de Ecología Cuantitativa, Universidad Autónoma de Guerrero. Av. Gran Vía Tropical 20, Fraccionamiento Las Playas, CP 39390. Acapulco, Guerrero, México; hdezmorale@gmail.com

Abstract

Despite the important effort of knowing the Ophiuroidea diversity in the Mexican Pacific, some mistakes in the taxonomic nomenclature have pervaded through time. In order to clarify the latter, a checklist based on literature review of brittle stars from the Mexican Pacific is provided. We reviewed a total of 105 references that in total summarized 125 species of brittle stars from the Mexican Pacific (112) and the Gulf of California (97), belonging to two orders, 16 families and 50 genera. These records are higher than those reported on previous studies carried out in the area. México is the country with the highest number of brittle stars reported in the Tropical Eastern Pacific; this may be due to its exceptional oceanographic conditions, location and coastline extension. However, a total of 27 species reported in the literature were considered doubtful due to their general distributions and were not included in the checklist. Of the reported species, 35 have their type locality in the Mexican Pacific, corroborating the importance of the country in the Tropical Eastern Pacific in terms of Echinodermata diversity. Rev. Biol. Trop. 63 (Suppl. 2): 37-47. Epub 2015 June 01.

Key words: Brittle stars; bibliographic references; checklist; distribution; valid names

Resumen

A pesar del importante esfuerzo en el conocimiento de la diversidad de ofiuroideos del Pacífico mexicano, algunos errores en la nomenclatura taxonómica han perseverado a través del tiempo. Con el objetivo de clarificar lo anterior, se provee una lista de especies de ofiuroideos del Pacífico Mexicano, basada en la revisión de literatura. Se revisó un total de 105 referencias que en total suman 125 especies pertenecientes a dos órdenes, 16 familias y 50 géneros de ofiuros del Pacífico Mexicano (112) y el Golfo de California (97). Estos reportes son mayores que otros estudios llevados a cabo en el área. México es el país con el mayor número de ofiuros reportados en el Pacífico Oriental Tropical; esto puede deberse a su excepcional condición oceanográfica, ubicación y extensión de línea de costa. Un total de 27 de las especies reportadas en la literatura fueron consideradas dudosas de acuerdo distribución geográfica por lo que no fueron incluidas en la lista. 35 especies poseen su localidad tipo en el Pacífico Mexicano, corroborando la importancia de México en el Pacífico Oriental Tropical en términos de diversidad de equinodermos.

Palabras clave: estrellas quebradizas; referencias bibliográficas; listado; distribución; nombres válidos

The Mexican Pacific coast comprises the Gulf of California and a total of 11 States distributed in a coast line of approximately 8 000 km (Instituto Nacional de Estadística y Geografía, 2012). The area is very complex, it can present a great range of depths (up to 5 000 m), high values of productivity, and a large number of ecosystems such as submarine canyons, islands, rocky and sandy coast, coast lagoons, estuaries, coral reefs and mangroves, therefore the zone holds a high marine biodiversity (Wilkinson et al., 2009).

The study of the Ophiuroidea in the Mexican Pacific coast started during the nineteenth century when Lyman (1860) reported for the first time ophiuroids (Ophiocoma alexandri, Ophioderma teres, Ophionereis annulata) from the Mexican Pacific waters. During this century, the first expedition, the Albatross (1891) was conducted in some areas from the Mexican Pacific (Gulf of California, Marías Islands, Acapulco), and produced the important work of Lütken and Mortensen (1899), who described a large number of new brittle stars unknown to science. Following the former work, several other pioneering studies were conducted during this century, special mention deserve the works of Lyman (1865, 1882), Verrill (1867a, 1867b, 1867c, 1868, 1869, 1871a, 1871b), and Ives (1889a, 1889b).

The twentieth century was by far, the most productive in terms of published works and expeditions. In 1911 the expedition Albatross was carried out in the Gulf of California (mostly in San Francisquito Bay), a total of 34 species of brittle stars were collected and later reported in Clark (1913, 1923). The second oceanographic expedition of the Pawnee (1926) took place in the Gulf of California (Boone, 1926). In the 1930´s, several expeditions were carried out: Zaca in the Gulf of California and Clarion Island (1936; Ziesenhenne, 1937), Zaca in Baja California, Jalisco, Guerrero and Oaxaca (1937-1938; H.L. Clark, 1940), the Presidential Cruise in the Gulf of California (1938; A.H. Clark, 1939), and Velero III in the Gulf of California, Baja California, Jalisco, Guerrero and Oaxaca (1934-1939; Ziesenhenne, 1940). In 1940, an expedition of the Western Flyer in the Gulf of California was carried out (Steinbeck & Ricketts, 1941). By the end of the century, studies conducted by national scientific begun to increase, thus contributing largely to the knowledge of Ophiuroidea in the area (i.e.Caso 1951, 1962, 1979, 1983, 1986a, 1986b, 1992; Pacheco-Ruíz & Aguilar-Rosas, 1982; Salcedo-Martínez et al., 1988; Buitrón-Sánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993; Caso et al., 1996; Solís-Marín et al., 1997; Cintra-Buenrostro et al., 1998).

As opposed to the XX century, the current one is characterized by major contributions of Mexican scientist regarding a wide variety of topics such as ecology (Benítez-Villalobos, 2001; Zamorano & Leyte, 2005; GonzálesMedina et al., 2006), inventories of species (Solís-Marín et al., 2005; Honey-Escandón et al., 2008; Ríos-Jara et al., 2008a, 2008b, 2013; López-Uriarte et al., 2009; Hendrickx, 2012; Granja-Fernández et al., 2014), new distribution records (Frontana-Uribe et al., 2000; Hernández-Herrejón et al., 2010; Granja-Fernández & López-Pérez, 2011; Herrero-Pérezrul et al., 2014), potential distribution (Ayala-Bocos et al., 2011), symbiosis (Granja-Fernández et al., 2013), and reproduction (Benítez-Villalobos et al., 2012).

The major effort of knowing the biodiversity of brittle stars in the Mexican Pacific has provided a large amount of information (i.e. substrata, depths, distribution records), and remarkable contributions have summarized the information about ophiuroids from the Mexican Pacific (Buitrón-Sánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993; Solís-Marín et al., 2005; Honey-Escandón et al., 2008; Hendrickx, 2012; Solís-Marín et al., 2013). Despite the valuable effort, differences in nomenclature have persisted over time thus hampering the knowledge of the brittle stars in the Mexican Pacific. Therefore, the main goal of the present contribution is to provide an up to date checklist of the valid names of brittle stars and their distribution in the Mexican Pacific, based on literature review.

Materials and methods

Species names of Ophiuroidea recorded in scientific publications concerning the Mexican Pacific region were compiled. Species names were assigned to any of the following areas: the Gulf of California (GF), Baja California (Pacific coast) (BC), Baja California Sur (Pacific coast) (BCS), Nayarit (NAY), Marías Islands (MAR), Isabel Island (ISA), Jalisco (JAL), Colima (COL), Revillagigedo Islands (REV), Michoacán (MICH), Guerrero (GRO), Oaxaca (OAX) and Chiapas (CHIS). When the literature did not mention a specific geographic site for a species, we assigned the record to the Mexican Pacific (MP).

The complete list of consulted literature includes about 105 references (1860-2014). Among the most relevant references are Lütken and Mortensen (1899), Clark (1913, 1915, 1940), Ziesenhenne (1937, 1940), Caso (1951, 1962, 1979, 1986a, 1986b, 1992), Downey (1969), Buitrón-Sánchez and Solís-Marín (1993), Maluf and Brusca (2005), Solís-Marín et al. (2005), Honey-Escandón et al. (2008), Hendrickx (2012), Solís-Marín et al. (2013) and Granja-Fernández et al. (2014). The checklist is based solely on data reported in the literature and no specimens were examined.

The checklist represents a list of species currently considered as valid. Systematics arrangements follow the criteria of Smith et al. (1995) and Okanishi and Fujita (2013). Meanwhile, valid names agree with Stöhr et al. (2014).

Results

Table 1 shows the list of the valid names of brittle stars and their distribution in the Mexican Pacific. For this area, the checklist contains 125 species belonging to two orders, 16 families and 50 genera. The families with the highest number of species were Amphiuridae (37), Ophiacanthidae (18), and Ophiuridae (14), but the families Asteroschematidae, Ophiomyxidae, Hemieuryalidae, Amphilepididae and Ophiochitonidae were represented by one species.

The Gulf of California was the zone with the highest number of species (97), followed by the Pacific coast of Baja California Sur (57), the Pacific coast of Baja California (48), Marías Islands (36), Guerrero (33), Oaxaca (29), Jalisco (21), Revillagigedo Islands (21) and Nayarit (20). The States of Chiapas (1), Colima (8), Michoacán (9) and Isabel Island (9) were the zones with the lowest number of reported brittle stars.

Table 1 List of valid species and geographical distribution of the Ophiuroidea from the Mexican Pacific, based on literature review 

Phylum Echinodermata Brugiére, 1791 Class Ophiuroidea Gray, 1840 Order Euryalida Lamarck, 1816 Family Asteroschematidae Verrill, 1899 Asteroschema sublaeve Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, MAR Family Asteronychidae Verrill, 1899 Asteronyx excavata Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BC, BCS, MAR Asteronyx longifissus Döderlein, 1927 BCS, GRO Asteronyx loveni Müller & Troschel, 1842 GC, BC, BCS Family Gorgonocephalidae Ljungman, 1867 Astrocaneum spinosum (Lyman, 1875) GC, BCS, MAR Astrodictyum panamense (Verrill, 1867) GC, BCS, REV Gorgonocephalus eucnemis (Müller & Troschel, 1842) BC Order Ophiurida Müller & Troschel, 1840 Family Ophiomyxidae Ljungman, 1867 Ophiomyxa panamensis Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BC, BCS, REV, GRO Family Ophiacanthidae Ljungman, 1867 Ophiacantha bathybia H.L. Clark, 1911 BC Ophiacantha cosmica Lyman, 1878 GC Ophiacantha costata Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, MAR Ophiacantha diplasia H.L. Clark, 1911 GC, BC, REV Ophiacantha eurypoma H.L. Clark, 1911 MP Ophiacantha hirta Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, MAR Ophiacantha moniliformis Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BCS, MAR, REV, GRO Ophiacantha normani Lyman, 1879 GC, BC, BCS Ophiacantha pacifica Lütken & Mortensen, 1899PM Ophiacantha phragma Ziesenhenne, 1940GC, BC Ophiacantha pyriformis Ziesenhenne, 1937REV Ophiacantha quadrispina H.L. Clark, 1917 GC Ophiacantha rhachophora H.L. Clark, 1911 GC, BCS Ophiacantha sentosa Lyman, 1878 GC, PM Ophiolimna bairdi (Lyman, 1883) GC, BC Ophiomitra granifera Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BC, MAR Ophiomitra partita Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, MAR Ophiotreta valenciennesi (Lyman, 1879) GC Family Hemieuryalidae Verrill, 1899 Amphigyptis perplexa Nielsen, 1932 GC
Family Ophiuridae Müller & Troschel, 1840 Amphiophiura oligopora (H.L. Clark, 1913) GC Amphiophiura superba (Lütken & Mortensen, 1899) GC, BCS, GRO Gymnophiura mollis Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, MAR Ophiernus adspersus annectens Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BCS, MAR, GRO Ophiocten hastatum Lyman, 1878 BC, BCS Ophiomisidium leurum Ziesenhenne, 1940OAX Ophiura bathybia H.L. Clark, 1911 BC, BCS Ophiura flagellata (Lyman, 1878) GC, BCS Ophiura leptoctenia H.L. Clark, 1911 BC Ophiura luetkenii (Lyman, 1860) GC, BC Ophiura sarsii Lütken, 1855 MP Ophiura (Ophiura) scutellata (Lütken & Mortensen, 1899) GC, MAR Ophiura (Ophiuroglypha) irrorata irrorata (Lyman, 1878) GC, BCS, MAR, OAX Stegophiura ponderosa (Lyman, 1878) GC, OAX Family Amphilepididae Matsumoto, 1915 Amphipholis pugetana (Lyman, 1860) GC, BC, BCS, NAY Amphipholis squamata (Delle Chiaje, 1828) GC, BC, BCS, GRO, OAX Amphiura arcystata H.L. Clark, 1911 GC, BC, GRO Amphiura carchara H.L. Clark, 1911 BC Amphiura otteri Ljungman, 1872 GC, BC, BCS Amphiura seminuda Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BC, BCS, REV, OAX Amphiura serpentina Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BCS, MAR, GRO Amphiura (Amphiura) diomedeae Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC Dougaloplus amphacanthus (McClendon, 1909) GC, MP Dougaloplus gastracanthus (Lütken & Mortensen, 1899) GRO Dougaloplus notacanthus (Lütken & Mortensen, 1899) GC, MAR Microphiopholis geminata (Le Conte, 1851) GC Microphiopholis platydisca (Nielsen, 1932) GC, BCS, NAY Microphiopholis puntarenae (Lütken, 1856) GC, BCS, MAR Ophiocnida californica Ziesenhenne, 1940GC, BC, BCS Ophiocnida hispida (Le Conte, 1851) GC, BCS, MAR, JAL, GRO, OAX Ophiophragmus lonchophorus Ziesenhenne, 1940JAL Ophiophragmus marginatus (Lütken, 1856) GC, NAY, JAL, OAX Ophiophragmus papillatus Ziesenhenne, 1940GRO, OAX Ophiophragmus paucispinus Nielsen, 1932 GC Ophiophragmus tabogensis Nielsen, 1932 GC, BCS Ophiostigma tenue Lütken, 1856 BCS, ISA Family Ophiotrichidae Ljungman, 1867 Ophiothela gracilis Nielsen, 1932 MP Ophiothela mirabilis Verrill, 1867 GC, BCS, NAY, ISA, JAL, MICH, GRO Ophiothrix galapagensis Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BCS, MAR, REV Ophiothrix (Ophiothrix) rudis Lyman, 1874 GC, BCS, NAY, MAR, REV, MICH, GRO, OAX Ophiothrix (Ophiothrix) spiculata Le Conte, 1851 GC, BC, BCS, NAY, MAR, ISA, JAL, COL, REV, MICH, GRO, OAX Family Ophiactidae Matsumoto, 1915 Hemipholis gracilis Verrill, 1867 GC, BCS, JAL Histampica duplicata (Lyman, 1875) GC Ophiactis savignyi (Müller & Troschel, 1842) GC, BC, BCS, NAY, MAR, JAL, COL, REV, MICH, GRO, OAX
Ophiactis simplex (Le Conte, 1851) GC, BC, BCS, NAY, MAR, ISA, JAL, COL, REV, MICH, GRO, OAX Ophiopholis aculeata (Linnaeus, 1767) MP Ophiopholis bakeri McClendon, 1909 GC, BC, BCS, REV Ophiopholis kennerlyi Lyman, 1860MP Ophiopholis longispina H.L. Clark, 1911 GC, BCS Family Ophionereididae Ljungman, 1867 Ophionereis albomaculata E.A. Smith, 1877 GC, MAR, ISA Ophionereis amphilogus (Ziesenhenne, 1940) BC Ophionereis annulata (Le Conte, 1851) GC, BC, BCS, NAY, ISA, JAL, COL, REV, MICH, GRO, OAX Ophionereis eurybrachiplax H.L. Clark, 1911 GC, BC Ophionereis perplexa Ziesenhenne, 1940GC, BCS, GRO Family Ophiocomidae Ljungman, 1867 Ophiocoma aethiops Lütken, 1859 GC, BC, BCS, NAY, MAR, ISA, JAL, COL, REV, MICH, GRO, OAX Ophiocoma alexandri Lyman, 1860GC, BC, BCS, NAY, MAR, ISA, JAL, COL, REV, MICH, GRO, OAX Ophiocomella schmitti A.H. Clark, 1939COL, REV Ophiocomella sexradia (Duncan, 1887) GC, MAR, REV Ophiopsila californica A.H. Clark, 1921 GC, BC, BCS Ophiopteris papillosa (Lyman, 1875) BC, BCS Family Ophiochitonidae Matsumoto, 1915 Ophiochiton fastigatus Lyman, 1878 GC Family Ophiodermatidae Ljungman, 1867 Diopederma daniana (Verrill, 1867) GC, BC, BCS, JAL, MICH, GRO, OAX, CHIS Ophioderma panamensis Lütken, 1859 GC, BC, BCS, MAR, ISA, JAL, REV, GRO, OAX Ophioderma pentacantha H.L. Clark, 1917 GC Ophioderma sodipallaresi Caso, 1986 GC Ophioderma sp. GRO, OAX Ophioderma teres (Lyman, 1860) GC, BC, BCS, NAY, MAR, JAL, GRO, OAX Ophioderma vansyoci Hendler, 1996 GC, BCS Ophioderma variegata Lütken, 1856 GC, BC, BCS, NAY, MAR, JAL, REV, GRO, OAX Ophioncus granulosus Ives, 1889 GC Ophiopaepale diplax (Nielsen, 1932) GC, BCS Ophiuroconis bispinosa Ziesenhenne, 1937GC, BCS, REV Family Ophiolepididae Ljungman, 1867 Ophiolepis crassa Nielsen, 1932 GC, BC, BCS, MAR Ophiolepis fulva H.L. Clark, 1940OAX Ophiolepis pacifica Lütken, 1856 GC, NAY, MAR, JAL, GRO, OAX Ophiolepis plateia Ziesenhenne, 1940JAL Ophiolepis variegata Lütken, 1856 GC, BCS, NAY, MAR, JAL, COL, GRO, OAX Ophiomusium glabrum Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, BC, BCS, OAX Ophiomusium lymani Wyville-Thomson, 1873 GC, BC, BCS, MAR Ophiomusium variabile Lütken & Mortensen, 1899GC, MAR, JAL, REV, GRO Ophiosphalma jolliense (McClendon, 1909) GC, BCS Ophioplocus esmarki Lyman, 1874 GC, BC, BCS

Gulf of California (GF), Baja California (Pacific coast) (BC), Baja California Sur (Pacific coast) (BCS), Nayarit (NAY), Marías Islands (MAR), Isabel Island (ISA), Jalisco (JAL), Colima (COL), Revillagigedo Islands (REV), Michoacán (MICH), Guerrero (GRO), Oaxaca (OAX), Chiapas (CHIS), Mexican Pacific (MP).

The brittle stars Ophiothrix (Ophiothrix) spiculata, Ophiactis simplex, Ophiocoma aethiops and Ophiocoma alexandri were the most widespread species in the Mexican Pacific, inhabiting all the zones except the State of Chiapas. Other species with wide distribution were Ophiactis savignyi, Ophionereis annulata, Ophioderma panamensis and Ophioderma variegata. It is important to note that 30 species were reported in just one zone, most of them in the Northern part of the Mexican Pacific such as the Gulf of California, or the Pacific coast of Baja California Sur and Baja California (Table 1). Specifically, in the Mexican Pacific, the species Ophiacantha cosmica, Ophiacantha quadrispina, Ophiotreta valenciennesi, Amphigyptis perplexa, Amphiophiura oligopora, Amphiura (Amphiura) diomedeae, Microphiopholis geminata, Ophiophragmus paucispinus, Histampica duplicata, Ophiochiton fastigatus, Ophioderma pentacantha, Ophioderma sodipallaresi and Ophioncus granulosus were confined to the Gulf of California. On the other hand, since the distribution records of 27 species reported in the literature were considered doubtful, they were not included in the checklist.

Discussion

This updated compilation of brittle stars of the Mexican Pacific includes more taxa than the reported in any of the previous reviews for this area (Buitrón-Sánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993; Solís-Marín et al., 2005; Honey-Escandón et al., 2008; Hendrickx, 2012; Solís-Marín et al., 2013). We reported a total of 97 species in the Gulf of California and 112 in the Mexican Pacific. Previously, 41-71 species were recorded in the Gulf of California (BuitrónSánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993; Solís-Marín et al., 2005; Solís-Marín et al., 2013), and 63 - 84 species were listed for the Mexican Pacific (Buitrón-Sánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993; Honey-Escandón et al., 2008; Hendrickx, 2012). Differences in diversity among studies are related to differences in methodology, but also to the addition of new records in the area. Honey-Escandón et al. (2008), for example, only reported brittle stars deposited in the National Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian Institution) and the Colección Nacional de Equinodermos “Dra. Ma. Elena Caso” (Instituto de Ciencias del Mar y Limnología, Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México), while our checklist was draw after literature search. Meanwhile, the recent addition of new species records in the region such as Gorgonocephalus eucnemis in Guadalupe Island, Baja California (Herrero-Pérezrul et al., 2014), Ophioderma sp. in the verge of description and recently discovered in Guerrero and Oaxaca (Granja-Fernández et al. 2014), and Ophiacantha pacifica collected in the Mexican Pacific (Hendrickx, 2012) added to the difference among this and previous studies.

Specifically, the current list of species increases the number of known brittle stars reported by Honey-Escandón et al. (2008) for some areas of the Mexican Pacific coasts: Baja California (23), Baja California Sur (36), Marías Islands (11), Jalisco (14), Colima (5), Revillagigedo Islands (13), Guerrero (28) and Oaxaca (10), thus for this area, the current checklist increment the total number of species in a 30 to 85 %. We also found the same number of brittle stars for Michoacán (9) and Chiapas (1) as Honey-Escandón et al. (2008), which suggest that there have been no new reports for these States during the last five years.

Regarding other countries of the Tropical Eastern Pacific, México is the country with the highest number of species in the area (125), followed by Panamá (75; Coppard & Alvarado, 2013), Perú (42; Hooker et al., 2013), Costa Rica (38; Alvarado et al., 2013), Colombia (30; Benavides-Serrato et al. 2013), Ecuador (21; Sonnenholzner et al., 2013), El Salvador (17; Alvarado et al., 2013), Nicaragua (12; Alvarado et al., 2013), Guatemala (7; Alvarado et al., 2013), and Honduras (3; Alvarado et al., 2013). It is relevant that the Gulf of California by itself possesses more species (98) than any other country in the Tropical Eastern Pacific, this can be explained by its geographical location and conformation (Lluch-Cota et al., 2007), as well as a major coastline compared to other countries. Similarly, Marías Islands possess more species (36) than comparable size island as Cocos Island (30; Alvarado et al., 2013) but less than the Galápagos archipelago (82; Sonnenholzner et al., 2013).

According to the literature research, we realized that the distribution record of some of the reported species is doubtful. The species Ophiocoma (Breviturma) brevipes (Stiansky & Groenewegen, 1929), Amphiodia guillermosoberoni, Astrocaneum herrerai, Ophiocoma echinata, Ophiocoma pumila, Ophiocoma wendtii, Ophioderma appressa, Ophioderma cinerea, Ophiophragmus wurdemani, Ophiopsila riisei, Ophiopyren longispinus, Ophiothrix (Ophiothrix) angulata, Ophiothrix (Ophiothrix) oerstedii, Ophiothrix (Acanthophiothrix) suensoni, Ophiura acervata, Ophiura ljungmani (Buitrón-Sánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993), Hemipholis elongata (Solís-Marín et al., 2005), Amphioplus coniortodes, Ophiocomella ophiactoides (Honey-Escandón et al., 2008), Hemipholis cordifera and Ophiacantha pentacrinus (Solís-Marín et al., 2013) previously reported in the Gulf of California and the Mexican Pacific, have their distribution in the Western Atlantic, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of México (Hendler et al., 1995; Stöhr et al., 2014), while Amphiura koreae (Luke, 1982) and Ophiacantha adiaphora (Buitrón-Sánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993; Hendrickx, 2012) have been only reported to inhabit in the Western Pacific and the Bering Sea (Stöhr et al., 2014). It is important to emphasize that all the above records are the only ones in the entire Eastern Pacific therefore the presence of the species in the area should be taken with caution.

The species Ophiernus adspersus adspersus currently inhabiting the Western Atlantic, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of México (Stöhr et al., 2014), was recorded in Baja California Sur, Marías Islands and Guerrero by Honey-Escandón et al. (2008) after material deposited in the National Museum of Natural History (Smithsonian Institution). We consulted these records in the available online database of the Smithsonian Institution (http:// collections.nmnh.si.edu/search/iz/) and detected that the records correspond to the species Ophiernus polyporum, a synonym of the valid species Ophiernus adspersus annectens, therefore this report corresponds to the latter and not to O. adsperus adspersus. On this regard, we did not include O. adspersus adspersus in the current checklist.

The reported brittle stars Ophiopholis kennerlyi (Ives, 1889b; Hendrickx, 2012), Ophiopholis aculeata (Buitrón-Sánchez & Solís-Marín, 1993), Amphiodia periercta, Ophiacantha eurypoma and Ophiura sarsii (Hendrickx, 2012) in Mexican Pacific waters needs to be confirmed since their distributions occur in the North Pacific Ocean (from California to Artic Ocean) and there is no other record of these species in lower latitudes. Finally, Amphioplus (Unioplus) daleus, Ophiacantha cosmica, Ophiernus seminudus, Ophiotoma paucispina and Ophiura plana, have been mentioned in localities called “off México”, “590 km south of Puerto Angel, Oaxaca” and “Gulf of Tehuantepec, Oaxaca” corresponding to the Albatross Station 3414 (Lütken & Mortensen, 1899; Turner & Hallan, 2011; Granja-Fernández & López-Pérez, 2012; Hendrickx, 2012); we corroborated the geographic coordinates of the station (10°14´ N - 96°29´ W; Lütken & Mortensen, 1899), and found that it is off Mexican waters, therefore the records of these species in Oaxacan territory are incorrect and were removed for the State in the current list.

A total of 35 species of brittle stars collected in Mexican Pacific waters bear some type status, of these, 20 are holotype (Amphichondrius laevis, Amphiodia sculptilis, Amphiophiura oligopora, Dougaloplus gastracanthus, Dougaloplus notacanthus, Amphiura seminuda, Ophiura (Ophiura) scutellata, Ophiacantha phragma, Ophiacantha pyriformis, Ophiocnida californica, Ophiocoma alexandri, Ophioderma sodipallaresi, Ophioderma vansyoci, Ophionereis amphilogus, Ophiolepis fulva, Ophiolepis plateia, Ophiophragmus lonchophorus, Ophiophragmus papillatus, Ophiomitra partita, Ophiuroconis bispinosa). The large number of species recorded in the area as well as the importance of the type material, highlights the relevance of the Mexican Pacific waters to the taxonomy and diversity of ophiuroids in the Tropical Eastern Pacific. Regardless the high number of records of Ophiuroidea in the Mexican Pacific, large stretches of Colima, Michoacán and Chiapas remain unexplored therefore systematic effort in poor known areas surely should increase the biodiversity in the area. Also, we suggest realizing more studies involving literature review in other marine taxa since these allow to determinate with more precision an inventory of the regional fauna and provide baseline data for future taxonomical, ecological and biogeographic works.

Acknowledgments

We thank Alicia Durán-González, Francisco Solís-Marín, Héctor Reyes-Bonilla, Emerson Martínez-Zavala, Paola CervantesAguilar, Gordon Hendler and Sabine Stöhr for providing valuable information. This work was funded by CONABIO (JF047). While this work was done, RGF was supported by a scholarship from CONACYT (336853). We thank the reviewers and editor for commenting and improving the manuscript.

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Received: May 30, 2014; Revised: October 03, 2014; Accepted: November 17, 2014

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