Echinoderms Flashcards
What animals are Echinodermata?
Sea stars
Sea urchins
Sea cucumbers
What is the huge difference between Echinoderms and Molluscs?
Echinoderms are deuterostomes, whereas molluscs are protostomes
Echinoderm anatomy
- Pentaradial symmetry (imposed on bilateral symmetry)
- Calcareous endoskeleton (inside their body) of separate plates called OSSICLES
- Water vascular system used to move around
- Tube feet called podia used to move around
- Complete gut
- Decentralised nervous system
- Upper surface is aboral surface with anus in the middle of it
- Mouth is underneath on the oral surface
- On oral surface are grooves in the arms known as ambulacral grooves or walking grooves. Tube feet protrude from these ambulacral grooves. They can be retracted or extended by use of the water vascular system
Echinoderm reproduction
- Most echinoderms reproduce by spawning (releasing eggs)
- The fertilised eggs develop into planktonic free-swimming larvae
- The larvae are 1mm long
- The plankton have arm structures to stop them from sinking, and different echinoderm classes have different arrangements of these arms
- The larvae are bilaterally symmetrical
- They also have bands of cilia called ciliary bands which are used for motility and feeding
- They have complete digestive tracts with a mouth, oesophagus, stomach, intestine and anus
Classes of Echinoderm
- Echinoidea - sea urchins, 1000 species
- Holothuroidea - sea cucumbers
- Concentricycloidea - sea daisies
- Asteroidea - star fish / sea star
- Ophiuroidea - brittle stars
What is the difference between each class of Echinoderm?
The oral and aboral surfaces are oriented differently
Echinoderm ossicles
- Ossicles form the endoskeleton which provides rigidity and protection
- Asteroids - ossicles are small and in the shape of crosses, rods or plates. They are each about 1mm in size. They are a single crystal of magnesium-rich calcite
Ophiuroid ossicles
Ossicles similar in size to those of Asteroids but more developed. They can form vertebral ossicles which articulate against each other to form a ‘joint’, making Ophiuroids the most mobile Echinoderm. They are capable of rapid walking by pushing and pulling themselves with arm move meant. In brittle stars the podia are not used for locomotion as they are just sensory and do not have suction capabilities
Holothurian ossicles
Very small ossicles, separates from each other. Well-developed muscle layers
Echinoid ossicles
Ossicles are much better developed and form plates of variable sizes which are fused into a hard armoured covering called the test. Each plate is a single crystal of calcite. The ambulacral ossicle plates have holes in them, through which podia can protrude
What is self-evisceration?
A holothurian (sea cucumber) defence mechanism - when they are threatened their internal organs shoot out
Echinoderm spines
- The spines are related to ossicles because they are also made of calcite, and they protrude through the dermis rather than being hidden
- In Echinoids they are large and well developed
- Usually the spines are mobile and mounted on socket joints
- They are moved by muscles and are for protection
- They respond by moving towards the point of touch
- There is often poison at the tip of the spine, produced by a poison sac
What sea urchin causes irritant wounds if you step on them?
Diadema
Echinoderm pedicellaria
- Modified spines that keep the surface of an echinoderm free of settling organisms, which they need because they are slow moving
- Tiny, claw-like structures
- Best developed in Asteroids and Echinoids
- Cilia also help to remove settling organisms
- The simplest arrangement of pedicellaria is 3 simple, unstalked nipping jaws, most common in starfish
- Pedicellaria were once thought to be parasitic hydroids
What type of pedicellaria does the most common UK starfish have?
Asterias
Two types of pedicellaria: the nipping and cutting type - these have different arrangements of opening and closing muscles