Abstract

Fourteen crinoid species are found along the coral reefs of the northern Red Sea that form aggregations of different species at various depths. The shallowest aggregation consists partly of Lamprometra klunzingeri and Capillaster multiradiatus, occurring subtidal to a depth of 2 to 5 m. Of this group, Heterometra savignii inhabits depths down to 12–15 m. Further down, another group of 10-armed crinoids occurs, dominated by Decametra chadwicki and Oligometra serripinna. The deepest aggregation of crinoids occurs at 45 m; its most common members are Colobometra arabica and Comaster distinctus. Feeding on micro- and nanoplankton, shallow-water crinoids show a circadian activity rhythm; in deeper aggregations (10 to 12 m), this behaviour changes with decreasing illumination, to a diurnal activity rhythm. The symbiotic animals living on crinoids comprise 27 taxons, among them Copepoda (6 species), Mollusca (2 species), Polychaeta (11 species, especially Myzostomida); Ophiurida (1 species), Crustacea, Decapoda (6 species); and the clingfish Lepadichthys lineatus. These symbiotic animals form food webs at various depths, according to the distribution of their crinoid host. The occurrence of Indo-West Pacific and Mediterranean commensals on the same crinoid in the Gulf of Aqaba is of special interest.

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