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Look Alikes

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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: Pycnopodia helianthoides grows larger, has more rays, has pedicellariae, and has obvious ossicles projecting from the aboral surface. Solaster stimpsoni has an orange or pink aboral surface with a grayish-blue streak radiating from the central disk out along each ray.
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Habitat

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Usually on rocky bottoms, but sometimes on gravel or sand
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Comprehensive Description

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This large seastar has 8-16 rays and no pedicellariae. Paxillae on the aboral surface are separated from each other by about their diameter and blunt, so that the dorsal surface is rather smooth. The ambulacral grooves have enlarged marginal plates along their margins. Disk diameter is about 1/3 total diameter and the aboral surface does not have a prominent gray-blue streak radiating from the central disk and out each ray. Rays taper gradually from base to tip. Aboral surface usually brown or or grayish, but may be orange or mottled. Diameter to 40 cm.
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Comprehensive Description

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Biology/Natural History: Solaster dawsoni is a predator on other seastars, including Solaster stimpsoni, other Solaster dawsoni, Leptasterias hexactis, Evasterias troschelii, Dermasterias imbricata, Henricia leviuscula, Crossaster papposus,Pycnopodia helianthoides, and Mediaster aequalis. It also has been seen to feed on the sea cucumbers Eupentacta quinquesemita, Psolus chitonoides, Cucumaria miniata, and young Parastichopus californicus, and on the nudibranch Tritonia festiva, which swims away rapidly when touched. Many other seastars also move away quickly when touched by S. dawsoni. S. dawsoni moves along with its leading rays raised, and lunges forward when it touches another star. S. stimpsoni, one of its favorite prey species, curls all its arms upward above the disk when encountered and sometimes wards off the attack. In Auke Bay, Alaska, S. dawsoni seems to eat mainly green urchins Strongylocentrotus droebachiensis. The commensal polychaete scaleworms Arctonoe vittata and Arctonoe fragilis are common on the star. Spawning occurs in mid April in southern British Columbia. Eggs are about 1 mm in diameter. Juveniles often take refuge among the tubedwelling polychaete Phyllochaetopterus prolifica.
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Distribution

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Geographical Range: Point Franklin, Alaska to Monterey Bay, CA
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Habitat

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Depth Range: Intertidal to 414 m
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Solaster dawsoni

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Solaster dawsoni, the morning sun star, is a species of starfish in the family Solasteridae. It is found on either side of the northern Pacific Ocean. It has two subspecies:

  • S. d. arcticus Verrill, 1914
  • S. d. dawsoni Verrill, 1880

Description

The morning sun star has a wide disc and 8 to 13 (usually 11 or 12) long, tapering arms, often with turned-up tips. The upper or aboral surface is smooth, and its colour is usually red, orange, grey, or pale brown, sometimes with paler patches. It grows to a width of about 40 cm (16 in).[2][3]

Distribution

The morning sun star occurs in the northern Pacific Ocean at depths to about 420 m (1,380 ft). Its range extends from Japan, China, and Siberia to the coasts of North America as far south as California.[2] It is often found in rocky habitats, but can also inhabit other types of seabed.[3]

Behaviour

Solaster dawsoni attacking a spiny red sea star, Hippasteria spinosa
An adult specimen of Solaster dawsoni afflicted by the Sea star wasting disease off Vancouver.

The morning sun star is a predator, feeding mostly on other starfish. It is feared by other stars which move away as fast as they can if touched by a morning sun star. In British Columbia, about half of its diet consists of leather stars (Dermasterias imbricata), which move too slowly to evade it. Other sea stars such as the velcro star (Stylasterias forreri) and the rainbow star (Orthasterias koehleri) fight back at their attacker. They have numerous tiny pincer-like organs called pedicellariae and coil their arms around the morning sun star, nipping it with these. It recoils and its prey often manages to escape. Another sometimes successful defence strategy is used by the slime star (Pteraster tesselatus) which inflates its aboral surface making it difficult for the attacker to get a grip on it and at the same time exudes copious amounts of noxious mucus.[2] Even the often larger sunflower seastar (Pycnopodia helianthoides) retreats when touched by a morning sun star.[2] If grabbed, the sunflower star may leave one of its arms behind, a process called autotomy, sacrificing this limb to make its escape.[4] The morning sun is also a cannibal, feeding on other individuals of its own species, and also feeds on sea cucumbers and diamondback nudibranchs.[3]

The morning sun star breeds between March and June. The gonads release eggs and sperm which rise to the surface where the eggs are fertilised. They have large yolks and the developing larvae rely on this and do not feed. They can swim and they drift with the currents as part of the zooplankton. They later sink to the seabed and undergo metamorphosis into juvenile starfish.[3][5]

This species has been subject to the Sea star wasting disease since 2013.[6]

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Solaster dawsoni.
  1. ^ "WoRMS - World Register of Marine Species - Solaster dawsoni Verrill, 1880". Marinespecies.org. Retrieved 2012-02-15.
  2. ^ a b c d "Morning sun star: Solaster dawsoni". Sea stars of the Pacific Northwest. 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-09-09. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  3. ^ a b c d "Solaster dawsoni". Race Rocks Taxonomy. Retrieved 2012-09-21.
  4. ^ "Sunflower star: Pycnopodia helianthoides". Sea stars of the Pacific Northwest. 2011. Archived from the original on 2012-09-09. Retrieved 2012-09-24.
  5. ^ Dorit, R. L.; Walker, W. F.; Barnes, R. D. (1991). Zoology. Saunders College Publishing. p. 782. ISBN 0-03-030504-7.
  6. ^ Mah, Christopher (2013-09-03). "Mysterious Mass Sunflower Starfish (Pycnopodia) Die-off in British Columbia". Echinoblog. Retrieved 2013-11-17.
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Solaster dawsoni: Brief Summary

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Solaster dawsoni, the morning sun star, is a species of starfish in the family Solasteridae. It is found on either side of the northern Pacific Ocean. It has two subspecies:

S. d. arcticus Verrill, 1914 S. d. dawsoni Verrill, 1880
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