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Echinoderms The spiny skinned animals Introduction • Echinodermata are all marine, triploblastic unsegmented coelomates • Phylum has 3 unique features: – pentagonal symmetry (bilateral in larvae) – calcite spicules embedded in the skin, often partly fused – Tube feet (podia) An unhurried phylum.. • No echinoderm moves fast, apart from a very few deep sea holothurids which swim actively • Crinoids are sessile, the others crawl at a rate of mm / minute • During one Antarctic marine survey a starfish was tagged. A year later the same animal was in the same exact spot, having apparently done nothing at all! 5-radial layout • Many organ systems in the echinoderms follow the same basic structure as the water-vascular and nervous systems: a 5-radial circum-oral ring • These rings give rise to 5 radial branches (canals in the case of the WVS) • A few asteroids have 7, 10, 11 arms - in which case 7,10, 11 radial branches Phylum Echinodermata • Echinoderms means “prickly skin” • Animals of this phylum include the starfish, sand dollar, sea cucumber and sea urchin. • Almost all live in the ocean • All adult echinoderms have radial symmetry. BODY STRUCTURE • All echinoderms have tube feet - these are hollow structures used for moving and grasping. • The tube feet are found on the ventral side of the echinoderm’s arm. • Each tube foot looks like a tiny medicine dropper with a suction cup at the bottom. How echinoderms use their tube feet. 1 Water enters an echinoderm through a hole on the top of its body. 2 The water then travels through canals in the arms to the tube feet. 3 Muscles allow water to move into and out of the tube feet. 4 This pumping action enables the suction cups to grasp and release objects and move the echinoderm along How a starfish eats 1 The tube feet help the starfish capture its food. 2 A star fish will wrap its arms around a clam attaching the arms to each side of the clam’s shell. 3 Eventually the tube feet will pull the shells apart. 4 The star fish then forces its stomach out of its body and into the clam shell. 5 The stomach digests the clam within the shell. Surface features • Echinoderm skin has several distinctive sets of organs protruding from their skin: – Tube feet (podia) – Spines – Pedicillaria Gonads • Lie as 10 (2N) paired structures at the base of ambulacral grooves. • Sexes are separate, and discharge gametes into the sea water • Gonads can be large - echinoid gonads almost fill the test, and can be eaten as a delicacy. Sadly... • Of the 13 classes of echinoderms known, 7 are extinct. • Echinoderms were dominant forms in Carboniferous seas, but have suffered a long-term decline in phyletic richness Echinoderms • The spiny skinned animals include: – – – – – Class Crinoidea - the crinoids Class Asteroidea - starfish (sea stars) Class Ophiuroidea - brittle stars, basket star Class Echinoidea - sea urchin, sand dollar Class Holothuroidea - sea cucumbers Crinoids • • • • Filter feeders some are sessile some are motile They were very common in the Paleozoic • Their bodies are often found in limestone deposits Crinoid Arm Star fish (sea star) • • • • Carnivores motile move on tube feet endoskeleton made of calcareous plates (ie. Calcium carbonate) • breathes through dermal “skin gills” Star fish • The water vascular system’s opening is called a madreporite. It opens into a vertical stone canal. The stone canal empties into a radial canal. The radial canal then goes out to the arms in radial canals. The radial canals then feed water to the tube feet. Starfish arm • Each arm contains a digestive gland and gonads • The top of the tube feet are called ampulla Starfish • The eye of the starfish is at the end of the arms. (It is often red coloured) • The anus of the starfish is on the top (aboral side) • The mouth piece of the starfish is called “Aristotle’s Lantern”. Tube Feet and Mouth Sunstar Brittle Stars • These are perhaps the fastest of the echinoderms. • Most of them are filter feeders or detritus eaters Basket Star Brittle Star Echinoidea • Lack arms • eat algae or are detritus eaters • usually have spines • are protected by pedicellarae Sea Heart • Sea Hearts are found in the mud of muddy beaches. Sea Cucumbers • Detritus eaters • do not have skeletal parts • will eviscerate if they are scared