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Published byRebecca Cannon Modified over 9 years ago
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GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS Ex: sea stars, brittle stars, sand dollars, sea urchins, & sea cucumbers All marine “ Spiny-Skinned Animals” - meaning Radial Symmetry as adults – 5 parts Regenerate = Autotomy
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Phylum Echinodermata Characteristics Adults have pentaradial ( 5 part) symmetry Capable of extensive regeneration
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GENERAL MORPHOLOGY A. INTERNAL SKELETON of calcareous (made of calcium) ossicles (plates) Variations : Brittle / Sea Stars – many small plates that move with one another
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Sea Urchin & Sand Dollar – skeleton plates fused into shell called “test”
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Sea Cucumber – degenerated & buried in leathery body
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B. Water Vascular System Network of canals – run throughout body ending w/tube feet Varying internal water pressure can extend or contract tube feet Tube feet end in small suction cups Used in locomotion, food capture, & respiration
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C. Mouth on oral surface (bottom / ventral) Anus on aboral surface (top / dorsal)
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ECHINODERM TYPES
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SEA STARS 5 Arms / Rays 4 – 10” Prey on bivalves (clams, mussels) & coral Many eat w/stomach outside body; pop stomach out mouth
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Body Plan 2 – 4 rows of tube feet on each ray extend from ambulacral groove
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Have pedicellariae or tiny, forceps-like structures on aboral surface to pick up & remove dirt
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Water Vascular System Water enters madreporite on aboral surface into a short, straight stone canal Stone canal connects to circular canal around the mouth = ring canal. Enters five radial canals extending down each arm
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Water Vascular System Radial canals carry water to hundreds of paired tube feet. Bulb-like sacs or ampulla on tube feet contract & create suction
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Other Body Systems No circulatory, excretory, or respiratory systems No head or brain Eyespots on the tips of each arm detect light
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Reproduction Separate sexes External fertilization Females produce 200,000,000 eggs / season; meroplankton (their larval stage is planktonic)
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BRITTLE STARS Most mobile; fast Snake-like movement Disc is.4 – 1.2 “; arms are 2 – 2.4 “ Scavengers In the largest class (with basket stars) Arms break off readily
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BRITTLE STAR LARVA
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SEA CUCUMBERS Lack arms & visible spines; elongated Flexible, leathery body Burrowers
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5 rows of tube feet run length of body 10-30 modified tube feet form tentacles around mouth Tentacles have sticky ends to trap plankton; or eat detritus Breathes through anus
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Eject internal organs to scare predators (evisceration) ; regenerate in days Symbiosis with Pearl Fish which lives in its anus. Feed on gonads by day
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Filter Feeders Can detach & move around Sea lilies & feather stars
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Sea Urchins Spines for protection, moving, trapping food Shell = test Divided into 10 sections 5 Ambulacral w/tube feet 5 Interambulacral without Covered w/muscle & skin to help mobility
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Tube feet – moving, capturing food Pedicellarea – cleaning & defense Aristotle’s Lantern – 5 teeth together like bird’s beak; to scrape algae from rocks
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Sand Dollars Flattened version of urchin Live in sand along coastlines Food falls between dense spines & carried to mouth by cilia & tube feet Tiny, moveable spines for burrowing Aristotle’s Lantern
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Sea Biscuits Not as flat as dollars Live in sand along coastlines; burrow Tube feet for respiration Pedicellarea Eat detritus in sand Short dense spines for movement cover test
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