Department of Invertebrate Zoology, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, District of Columbia, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2012;7(4):e35644. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0035644. Epub 2012 Apr 27.
Members of the Asteroidea (phylum Echinodermata), popularly known as starfish or sea stars, are ecologically important and diverse members of marine ecosystems in all of the world's oceans. We present a comprehensive overview of diversity and phylogeny as they have figured into the evolution of the Asteroidea from Paleozoic to the living fauna. Living post-Paleozoic asteroids, the Neoasteroidea, are morphologically separate from those in the Paleozoic. Early Paleozoic asteroid faunas were diverse and displayed morphology that foreshadowed later living taxa. Preservation presents significant difficulties, but fossil occurrence and current accounts suggests a diverse Paleozoic fauna, which underwent extinction around the Permian-Triassic interval was followed by re-diversification of at least one surviving lineage. Ongoing phylogenetic classification debates include the status of the Paxillosida and the Concentricycloidea. Fossil and molecular evidence has been and continues to be part of the ongoing evolution of asteroid phylogenetic research. The modern lineages of asteroids include the Valvatacea, the Forcipulatacea, the Spinlosida, and the Velatida. We present an overview of diversity in these taxa, as well as brief notes on broader significance, ecology, and functional morphology of each. Although much asteroid taxonomy is stable, many new taxa remain to be discovered with many new species currently awaiting description. The Goniasteridae is currently one of the most diverse families within the Asteroidea. New data from molecular phylogenetics and the advent of global biodiversity databases, such as the World Asteroidea Database (http://www.marinespecies.org/Asteroidea/) present important new springboards for understanding the global biodiversity and evolution of asteroids.
海星,又名星鱼,是棘皮动物门的成员,在全球海洋的生态系统中扮演着重要且多样的角色。我们全面概述了海星从古生代到现存动物群的进化过程中的多样性和系统发育。生活在古生代之后的海星,即 Neoasteroidea,在形态上与古生代的海星不同。古生代早期的海星类动物群多样,其形态预示了后来的活体分类群。化石的保存存在很大的困难,但化石的出现和目前的记录表明,古生代的动物群是多样化的,在二叠纪-三叠纪期间经历了灭绝,随后至少有一个幸存的谱系重新多样化。正在进行的系统发育分类争论包括 Paxillosida 和 Concentricycloidea 的地位。化石和分子证据一直是并将继续是海星系统发育研究不断进化的一部分。海星的现代谱系包括 Valvatacea、Forcipulatacea、Spinlosida 和 Velatida。我们概述了这些类群的多样性,以及简要介绍了每个类群在更广泛意义上的生态和功能形态。尽管海星的分类学有很多是稳定的,但仍有许多新的分类群有待发现,目前仍有许多新物种有待描述。Goniasteridae 目前是海星目中最多样化的家族之一。来自分子系统发育学的新数据以及全球生物多样性数据库的出现,如世界海星数据库(http://www.marinespecies.org/Asteroidea/),为理解海星的全球生物多样性和进化提供了重要的新跳板。