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Echinoderms

Characteristics of Echinoderms

  • Don't look/act like animals initially, they are

    • They move, attack prey, defend themselves, but tend to just be very slow about it

  • They all share:

    • Radially symmetrical body divided into five parts

    • Move have hundreds of tiny tube feet to crawl/climb

    • Most have a water vascular system that brings oxygen to the body cells

  • Echinoderms have some traits close to chordates:

    • Adult is radially symmetrical

    • Larvae is bilaterally symmetrical

    • Bilateral symmetry, along a vertical axis, is what mammals, fish, etc. have


Class Crinoidea

  • Includes feather stars and sealilies

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Long, feather-like arms and short, hook-like legs called cirri

    • Upward facing mouths

    • Most nocturnal feeders, at night they unfurl their arms to capture plankton and nutrients carried into their paths by the current

    • By day, they coil up tightly and hide in the reef

    • Most crinoids attach to the bottom by their cirri

Class Asteroidea

  • Sea stars belong to this class

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Predators w/ downward facing mouths

    • Tube feet covering their undersides

    • Usually have five arms

    • Few species have toxic spines for protection

    • Each arm carries an equal share of the animal's systems and organs

    • They can regenerate a lost limb, some grow into several new animals when cut into pieces

Class Ophiuroidea

  • Sand dollars/sea urchins belong to this class

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Possess a five-sectioned body with no arms

    • Sand dollar/sea urchins share a disk-shaped body

    • Tube feet on the underside

    • Sea urchins graze on algae

    • Swimmers avoid sea urchins because of spines

      • Some species have toxins in the spines for self defense

      • Urchins can move their spines/tube feet for locomotion

  • Shell is called a test

Class Holothuroidea

  • Sea cucumbers are part of this class

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Have elongated five segment body with tentacles around the mouth

    • Most feed by moving with their mouths open, allowing sand to flow through; a few are filter feeders

    • Some expel a sticky mass of white tubes covered in toxin

    • Protected by tough skin and the ability to expel part of their internal organs for predators while saving the rest to survive

    • They're also flshy. The things on them that look like spines are actually soft

    • Carnivorous

      • They invert their stomach through the mouth to envelope food

      • Intestine is short/missing

        • Sea urchins/sea cucumbers are the exception due to them feeding off plants

      • Body cavity is filled with a coelomic fluid

        • Coelomic - From the coelom, which is the main body cavity in most animals and is positioned inside the body to surround/contain the digestive tract and other organs.

      • Also serves to bring in oxygen

      • Sea cucumbers bring in water through anus to the respiratory branches

        • Extension of guts

Echinoderm Reproduction

  • Echinoderms have separate sexes with 5, 10, or more gonads that shed sperm/eggs

    • Spawning

    • Gametes do not survive long in the water

      • Individual spawn all at once

    • Fertilized eggs develop into plankton and results in a ciliated larva

      • Some echinoderms carry eggs

  • Asexual reproduction

    • Fission

      • Central disk splits into 2 new individuals

    • Regeneration

      • Ability to regrow missing parts

      • Requires that part of the central disk be present to grow a new individual

      • Sea stars do not require the disk


D

Echinoderms

Characteristics of Echinoderms

  • Don't look/act like animals initially, they are

    • They move, attack prey, defend themselves, but tend to just be very slow about it

  • They all share:

    • Radially symmetrical body divided into five parts

    • Move have hundreds of tiny tube feet to crawl/climb

    • Most have a water vascular system that brings oxygen to the body cells

  • Echinoderms have some traits close to chordates:

    • Adult is radially symmetrical

    • Larvae is bilaterally symmetrical

    • Bilateral symmetry, along a vertical axis, is what mammals, fish, etc. have


Class Crinoidea

  • Includes feather stars and sealilies

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Long, feather-like arms and short, hook-like legs called cirri

    • Upward facing mouths

    • Most nocturnal feeders, at night they unfurl their arms to capture plankton and nutrients carried into their paths by the current

    • By day, they coil up tightly and hide in the reef

    • Most crinoids attach to the bottom by their cirri

Class Asteroidea

  • Sea stars belong to this class

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Predators w/ downward facing mouths

    • Tube feet covering their undersides

    • Usually have five arms

    • Few species have toxic spines for protection

    • Each arm carries an equal share of the animal's systems and organs

    • They can regenerate a lost limb, some grow into several new animals when cut into pieces

Class Ophiuroidea

  • Sand dollars/sea urchins belong to this class

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Possess a five-sectioned body with no arms

    • Sand dollar/sea urchins share a disk-shaped body

    • Tube feet on the underside

    • Sea urchins graze on algae

    • Swimmers avoid sea urchins because of spines

      • Some species have toxins in the spines for self defense

      • Urchins can move their spines/tube feet for locomotion

  • Shell is called a test

Class Holothuroidea

  • Sea cucumbers are part of this class

  • Primary characteristics of this class:

    • Have elongated five segment body with tentacles around the mouth

    • Most feed by moving with their mouths open, allowing sand to flow through; a few are filter feeders

    • Some expel a sticky mass of white tubes covered in toxin

    • Protected by tough skin and the ability to expel part of their internal organs for predators while saving the rest to survive

    • They're also flshy. The things on them that look like spines are actually soft

    • Carnivorous

      • They invert their stomach through the mouth to envelope food

      • Intestine is short/missing

        • Sea urchins/sea cucumbers are the exception due to them feeding off plants

      • Body cavity is filled with a coelomic fluid

        • Coelomic - From the coelom, which is the main body cavity in most animals and is positioned inside the body to surround/contain the digestive tract and other organs.

      • Also serves to bring in oxygen

      • Sea cucumbers bring in water through anus to the respiratory branches

        • Extension of guts

Echinoderm Reproduction

  • Echinoderms have separate sexes with 5, 10, or more gonads that shed sperm/eggs

    • Spawning

    • Gametes do not survive long in the water

      • Individual spawn all at once

    • Fertilized eggs develop into plankton and results in a ciliated larva

      • Some echinoderms carry eggs

  • Asexual reproduction

    • Fission

      • Central disk splits into 2 new individuals

    • Regeneration

      • Ability to regrow missing parts

      • Requires that part of the central disk be present to grow a new individual

      • Sea stars do not require the disk