Document of dataset 1841

Dataset record

Type
Dataset
DOI
https://www.doi.org/10.14284/653
title in English
World Asteroidea Database
Acronym
WAD
Description in English
The Asteroidea (also known as sea stars or starfish) are among the most diverse and familiar of the living Echinodermata, including over 1800 species from every ocean basin in the world, including the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific as well as the Arctic and the Southern Ocean, inhabiting intertidal to 6000 m abyssal settings. Living asteroids are pentagonal to stellate (although some sphaerical forms are known) and have arms that are continuous with the disk. Two to four rows of tube feet are present. Most asteroids have five rays, but some can have as many as 50.


Taxonomic coverage of the database includes not only all “true” starfish taxa but also the enigmatic and controversial concentricycloids, which have been included based on the taxonomic classification of Mah (2006). Although identification of taxa with fossil members is indicated, most have not yet been included. Some fossil taxa may be entered in the future for completeness but fossil groups were not a primary objective for the WoRMS database.


The core of the World Asteroidea Database (WAD) is derived from the "Asteroid Names List" developed primarily by Ailsa M. Clark. However the WAD is complimented by numerous other echinoderm compendia (e.g., Clark & Downey's Starfishes of the Atlantic, Rowe & Gate's Zoological Catalogue of Australia, etc) and will eventually include all subsequent taxonomic changes and newly described taxa.


Please inform the editor, Christopher Mah, of any omissions, typos, or errors you encounter. I am also happy to review and discuss, other issues, such as synonymies, controversial taxonomic assignments, or broader classification questions and to initiate changes if they are warranted. All inquiries and discussion will be evaluated promptly but critically, and if deemed reasonable, included quickly into the database.


Further information on asteroids and echinoderms may be found at the authors’ blog: echinoblog.blogspot.com. An academic profile of the authors can be found at: http://invertebrates.si.edu/mah.htm.

Abstract in English
A world checklist of Asteroidea, compiled by taxonomic experts and based on peer-reviewed literature.
License
https://spdx.org/licenses/CC-BY-4.0.html
bibliographicCitation
Mah, C.L. (2025). World Asteroidea Database. Accessed at https://www.marinespecies.org/asteroidea on yyyy-mm-dd

Temporal coverage

Temporal
Start date
1758-01-01

Geographical coverage

Spatial
World Waters

Thesaurus terms

Keyword
Classification
Marine invertebrates
Species
Taxonomy

Themes

theme
Biology
Biology > Ecology - biodiversity
Biology > Invertebrates

Taxonomic terms

Taxon keywords
Asteroidea

Ownerships

contributor
Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee
contributor
Christopher Mah
contactPoint
Christopher Mah
creator
Christopher Mah
contributor
Christopher Mah

Dataset references

record
World Register of Marine Species

Special collections

part of special collection
Belgian marine datasets
Marine Biodiversity and Ecosystem Functioning
VLIZ Acknowledged Publications

Document metadata

date created
2009-02-11
date modified
2025-01-14