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Phylum Echinodermata Chapter 16 Phylum:Echinodermata  Means “spiny-skinned”  Approximately 7,000 species  All are found in marine habitats – all depths Echinoderm Characteristics  Calcareous endoskeleton in the form of ossicles  Adults with pentaradial symmetry and larvae with bilateral symmetry  Water-vascular system used in locomotion, attachment, and/or feeding  Complete digestive tract  Hemal system derived from coelomic cavities  Nervous system: nerve net, nerve ring, radial nerves ( no “brain” ) Echinoderm Evolution  Thought to share a common ancestor with hemichordates and chordates.  Evidence:    Deuterostome development Bilaterally symmetrical larval stages Extinct forms were not radially symmetric Pentaradial Symmetry  Body parts are arranged in fives, or multiples of fives, around an oral-aboral axis  No distinct head region  Adaptive for sedentary or slow moving animals (allows a uniform distribution of sensory, feeding, and other structures) Echinoderm Endoskeleton  Pentaradial symmetry may be a result of the evolution of the echinoderm endoskeleton  Consists of a series of ossicles – calcium carbonate plates  Frequently modified into spines that project from body surface X-Ray of endoskeleton Water-Vascular System  Unique to echinoderms  Series of water-filled canals with extensions called tube feet  Originates as a modification of the coelom  Ring canal surrounds the mouth, opens to the outside through a stone canal and an opening called the madreporite  5 (or multiples of) radial canals branch from the ring canal; one in each arm of sea stars Water-Vascular System Water-Vascular System  Tube feet are extensions of the canal system and emerge through skeletal ossicles  Internally: tube feet end in a bulblike, muscular ampulla  Ampulla contracts and forces water into the tube foot which then extends  Suction cup at opposite ends of tube feet contract and create a vacuum Water- Vascular System  Used in locomotion but has additional functions:   Original purpose: feeding Soft membranes of tube feet allow for gas exchange and diffusion of nitrogenous wastes across the body wall Hemal System  Consists of strands of tissue that encircle an echinoderm near the ring canal of the watervascular system and run into the radial canals of the arms  Derived from the coelom  Circulates fluid using cilia that line channels  Function largely unknown but may aid in transport of large molecules, hormones, or coelomocytes (engulf and transport waste) Class Asteroidea  Includes Sea Stars  ~ 1500 species  Most live on hard substrates  Most brightly colored Class Asteroidea Characteristics  Usually have five arms that radiate from center  Has movable and fixed spines  Oral and aboral surface Class Asteroidea Characteristics  Dermal branchiae or papulae: thin folds of the body wall which function in gas exchange  Ambulacral groove: series of ossicles in arm which run the length of the oral surface   Houses the radial canal Paired rows of tube feet on either side Class Asteroidea Movement  Sea Star tube feet move in a stepping motion coordinated by the nervous system    Alternate extension, attachment and contraction. All tube feet move in the same direction, but not in unison. Provide attachment during wave action Class Asteroidea Feeding  Feed on snails, bivalves, crustaceans, corals, detritus, etc.  Mouth opens to a short esophagus and then to stomach area.  Two stomachs:  Cardiac stomach – large oral stomach which receives ingested food  Pyloric stomach – smaller aboral stomach absorbs digested food Class Asteroidea Feeding  How       sea stars feed on bivalves: Wraps around bivalve’s opening Tube feet attach to outside of shell and forces valves apart Cardiac stomach lowered into bivalve Digestive enzymes released into shell for partial digestion Continued digestion occurs in pyloric stomach Stomach retracts into sea stars Sea Star Eating Squid Class Asteroidea Regeneration  Capable of regeneration  In some cases, an entire sea Click here for star can regenerate from a piece of broken arm regeneration video  Broken part must contain portion of central disk  Complete regeneration may take up to a year Class Asteroidea Reproduction  Most are dioecious  Two gonads present in each arm  External fertilization  Spawning coordinated by environmental factors   Length of light/dark Water temperature  Bipinnaria symmetric larvae bilaterally Class Ophiuroidea  “Snake Tail”  Over 2,000 species  Most diverse group  Includes brittle stars and basket stars  Arms are long and sharply set off from central disk  Central disk has pentagonal shape Class Ophiuroidea  Water vascular system is NOT used for locomotion  Ossicles (calcium carbonate plates of skeleton) are modified to permit a unique form of grasping and movement  Result is snake-like locomotion  Tube feet do not have suction disks (unlike sea stars)  Brittle Star "Crawling" Class Ophiuroidea Feeding  Predators and scavengers  Use arms and tube feet to sweep in food and trap plankton Maintenance  Capable of regeneration (autonomy for defense)  Dioecious, males are smaller and often carried by females Class Echinoidea  ~1,000 species  “Spiny”  Includes sea urchins, sand dollars and heart urchins  Attach to hard substrates or burrow in sand Class Echinoidea  Skeleton  is called a “test” Made of 10 sets of closely fitting plates  Move by using spines for pushing against substrate and tube feet for pulling  Some sea urchins have sharp spines and venom Class Echinoidea Feeding  Feed on algae, coral polyps and dead animal remains  Specialized chewing apparatus: “Aristotle’s Lantern” Reproduction & Development  Dioecious  Gametes shed into water  External fertilization  Larva undergoes metamorphosis Class Holothuroidea  “Sea Cucumber”  ~1,500 species  Includes the sea cucumbers  Lack arms  Have elongate bodies Class Holothuroidea  Tube  feet enlarged and highly modified Surround mouth and are called “tentacles”  Mostly sluggish burrowers and creepers  Locomotion using tube feet is inefficient  Contraction of body-wall muscles produce wormlike movements Class Holothuroidea Feeding  Ingest particles using tentacles  Food is trapped by mucus on tentacles  Thrust tentacles into mouth and “wipe off” trapped food  Stomach, long, looped intestine, a rectum, and an anus Class Holothuroidea Respiration  “Respiratory    Trees” Pair of tubes which attach at rectum and branch throughout body Pumping action of rectum circulates water into tubes Gases and nitrogenous wastes exchanged between water and coelom through respiratory trees Class Holothuroidea Defense  Defenseless against predators? No!  Many produce toxins in body walls  Some evert tubules of respiratory trees through anus (turn inside out)   Tubules have toxins and are sticky Can entangle and immobilize predators  Evisceration of respiratory trees and/or gonads a result of chemical and physical stress  Regeneration of lost parts Class Holothuroidea Reproduction  Most are dioecious  Have a single gonad  External fertilization  Tentacles may trap eggs and bring to body surface for brooding  Embryos develop into planktonic larvae  Can also reproduce by transverse fission followed by regeneration Class Crinoidea  Only ~630 living species  Includes Sea Lilies and Feather Stars  Most primitive of all living echinoderms  Extensive fossil records indicates high numbers during Paleozoic era (200 to 600 mya) Class Crinoidea  Very different from other echinoderms   Sea Lilies attach permanently to substrate by a stalk (sessile) Feather Stars swim by raising and lowering the arms and crawl by pulling with the tips of their arms. Class Crinoidea Feeding  Suspension feeding: Outstretched arms to trap plankton  Cilia carries to mouth  Water-vascular system used mostly for feeding (not locomotion) Response  Lack a nerve ring but do have a “nerve mass” and radial nerves that extend through each arm  Controls tube feet Class Crinoidea Reproduction  Most dioecious  In monoecious species, male gametes develop first to allow for cross-fertilization  Regeneration