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Asterias
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Asterias is a of the family of . It includes several of the best-known species of sea stars, including the () , Asterias rubens, and the northern Pacific seastar, Asterias amurensis. The genus contains a total of eight species in all. All species have five arms and are native to shallow oceanic areas (the ) of cold to temperate parts of the . These starfish have larvae. Asterias amurensis is an in and can in some years become a pest in the Japanese industry.


History
The genus Asterias was first described by in the 10th edition of Systema Naturae in 1758 when he published . It was for a time the only species, but by the early 1800s a few dozen taxa had been described in this genus.

In 1825 listed six species native to the coasts of the United States (which at the time consisted of the east coast from Maine to Florida, which the US had just formally acquired from Spain a few years earlier). None of these species are accepted or recognised as Asterias today.

Johannes Peter Müller and Franz Hermann Troschel worked on starfish systematics in 1840, renaming the genus Asteracanthion and splitting a number of new genera from it.

rejected Müller and Troschel's Asteracanthion in a paper presented on 4 December 1861, and named 16 new species, none of which are retained or included in Asterias at present. In 1875 formally reduced Asteracanthion to a synonym. Francis Jeffrey Bell listed 78 species in the genus in 1881, arranging them in some 16 unranked groupings (see artificial taxonomy).

A few years later, in 1889, counted 48 or 49 species in the genus. He split the genus into at least six , of which subgenus Asterias, section β of the Pentactinid (5-armed) section contained at least four species, three of which are still accepted in the genus today.

In the early 1900s Addison Emery Verrill, working on the east coast of the US, added a number of new species to the genus, none of which are still in Asterias, and split the genus into numerous new genera and created new genera, moving almost all of the species now recognised as belonging to Asterias to his new genus of Allasterias. He accepted six species for the Pacific coasts of North America, none of which remain in Asterias at present. Soon after, and in the following two decades, Walter Kenrick Fisher, working in California, synonymised or removed all of Verrill's species of Asterias, and synonymised Verrill's new genera of Allasterias and Parasterias with Asterias, leaving the genus with four species, all of which are still recognised today. Ryori Hayashi synonymised one further Japanese species in 1940, leaving the genus with three species known since the previous century, all of which are still recognised today.

Alexander Michailovitsch Djakonov added two new species from Far East Russia in 1950 and reinstated the three species which were synonymised by Fisher and Hayashi, bringing the genus to eight species, although it took until the 2000s for some from the United States to accept his new species.


Description
Asterias, like most starfish genera in the order , are recognisable externally by their , many thousands of tiny jaw-like structures on the skin which can snap shut to nip at prey or predators. Asterias has two types present -the major, also called straight, pedicellaria, which lie scattered across their skin, and the smaller minor, also called crossed, pedicellaria, which are found in tufts or wreaths around the large dorsal spines -these pedicellariae have tiny, rubbery stalks known as pedicels. are also present. All species normally have five arms. Internally, the also presents some diagnostic characters, such as the dorsal plates bearing only a single spine in their centre.

Sladen distinguishes it from the genus by the presence of spines on its plates, instead of large, spherical tubercles; and from by the well-developed, reticulate, abactinal skeleton.


Species
The World Register of Marine Species includes the following species: Distributions from Djakonov (1950).
northern Pacific seastar: northern in northern , , , , Far East Russia, and ()
(Peter the Great Gulf), South Korea
northwest , from south to the and Gulf of Mexico
on the southeastern coast of the Kamchatka Peninsula, Karaginsky Island
western to Far East Russia (Kamchatka peninsula, Sea of Okhotsk and )
around Japan, in the Sea of Japan, and in the along the coasts of China.
common starfish: northern Atlantic in from the of Russia to the Americas.
around southern Japan, , and the South China Sea.


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