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  2. Asterias amurensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asterias_amurensis

    This seastar is an invasive species in Australia. [19] It has colonised Australian waters in the Derwent Estuary, Port Phillip Bay and Henderson Lagoon in Tasmania. [2] [12] In the Derwent Estuary, the Northern Pacific seastar has been connected to the decline of the endemic endangered spotted handfish. [20] [21] [22]

  3. Northern Pacific seastar in Australia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Northern_Pacific_seastar...

    The Northern Pacific seastar is considered a serious pest of native marine organisms in Australia, and is a major factor in the decline of the critically endangered spotted handfish. It preys on the handfish eggs, and/or on the sea squirts (ascidians) [1] that help to form the substrate that the fish spawn on. [2]

  4. Asterias - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asterias

    Asterias is a genus of the Asteriidae family of sea stars.It includes several of the best-known species of sea stars, including the common starfish, Asterias rubens, and the northern Pacific seastar, Asterias amurensis.

  5. Henricia leviuscula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henricia_leviuscula

    In a study comparing seastar righting behavior the Henricia leviuscula twisted arms 1 and 3 toward each other, used arms 4 and 5 to support itself on the bottom of the tank, and moved arm 2 up so it was in a sitting-like position, and began to flip itself over. Overall, it had an average righting time of 15.22 minutes.

  6. Point Cook Coastal Park - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Point_Cook_Coastal_Park

    There are also marine and intertidal pest species present at the coastal park. The sabellid fan worm (Sabella spallanzanii) and the northern Pacific sea star (Asterias amurensis) both reside along the western shoreline of Port Phillip Bay and are very successful at spreading and out-competing native species. [2]

  7. Spotted handfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spotted_handfish

    The most urgent matter concerning the survival of the species is to address the threat posed by the presence of an introduced species of seastar, the Northern Pacific seastar (Asterias amurensis), which prey on not only the fish eggs, [15] [16] but also on the sea squirts [17] that help to form the substrate that the fish spawn on. [18]

  8. Henricia sanguinolenta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henricia_sanguinolenta

    Henricia sanguinolenta, commonly known as the northern henricia, is a species of sea star from the North Atlantic and North Pacific Oceans. Henricia sanguinolenta is very similar to Henricia oculata, also known as "bloody Henry", and the two can only be distinguished by laboratory tests. It comes in colors of red, yellow, orange, purple, and ...

  9. Solaster paxillatus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solaster_paxillatus

    The orange sun star is found in the northern Pacific Ocean, its range extending from Japan and the Bering Sea and along the North American coast as far south as California. With a depth range of between 11 and 3,740 metres (36 and 12,270 ft), it occurs at greater depths than any other starfish in the north west Pacific.