Echinoderms Revised
Echinoderms Revised
Echinoderms Revised
Sea urchin
Class ______________
Class _____________
Brittle Star
Starfish
Class ________________
Class ___________
Feather stars
Class ___________
Sand Dollars
The Sand Dollar is a spiny, hard-skinned animal that is shaped like
a coin (a flattened disk). Color and label the disk yellow. The body has
slots called lunules going through the body. The lunules on the aboral
(top surface) are where the eggs and sperm are released. Label and
color them tan. There are many different species of sand dollars.
They live on the sandy sea floor, from the intertidal zone (the area
between high tide and low tide) down to the subtidal zone (the area
below low tide). Most sand dollars are found at depths of 30 to 40
feet (9-12 m). Sand dollars partly bury themselves under the sand,
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with an edge poking up out of the sand. You can often find the dead
"shell" of a sand dollar (called a "test") washed up on sandy beaches. If
you break open a test, there are many hard, loose, white pieces; these
were the teeth of the Sand Dollar. The teeth surround the mouth on
the oral side of the sand dollar. Label and color the mouth pink. Sand
Dollars have 5-part radial symmetry. These invertebrates have a hard
skin made of calcium carbonate plates. The bottom surface contains
the mouth, many black spines (which trap food), and the cilia (small
hairs) that help direct food into the mouth. Sand Dollars have tiny
tube feet that are used as gills. The tube feet are found in grooves on
the oral surface. Label these grooves.
Sea Cucumbers
Sea cucumbers (Class Holothuroidea) are cylinder-shaped
invertebrate animals that live in seas worldwide. They are found in a
variety of sea floor habitats, from warm tropical waters to cold, deepsea trenches. These nocturnal animals have a life span of about 5 to 10
years. The body of the sea cucumber is elongated, leathery, and
muscular. Label and color the leathery body light green. Spines are
contained within the skin. These have five-part or pentaradial
symmetry. Surrounding the mouth are 8 to 30 tentacles (modified tube
feet). Label the mouth. Label and color the tentacles pink. Five
double rows of tube feet (with tiny suction cups) run along the body.
They are used for crawling along the seabed or anchoring to a rock.
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Label and color the tube feet red. A sea cucumber breathes by
pumping seawater in and out of an internal organ called a respiratory
tree. Some sea cucumbers burrow into the sea floor. They move by
wiggling their body. Sea cucumbers have no brain. The biggest sea
cucumber, the tiger's tail sea cucumber (Holothuria thomasi), is about
2 m long - most sea cucumbers are much smaller than this. Sea
cucumbers eat decaying matter that floats in the water or is in the
sand. Wastes leave the body through the anus at the posterior end .
Label the anus.
Sea Urchin
The sea urchin is a spiny, hard-shelled animal that lives on the
rocky seafloor, from shallow waters to great depths. These globular
marine invertebrates move very slowly along the seabed. There are
about 700 different species of sea urchins worldwide. Many sea
urchins have venomous spines. Label the spines and color them purple.
The biggest sea urchin is the red sea urchin (Strongylocentratus
franciscanus). It has a test (skeleton) about 7 inches (18 cm) in
diameter. Label and color the test violet. Adult sea urchins have
five-sided radial symmetry. Their skin has hard, chalky plates, and is
called the test. Sea urchins have a globular body and long spines that
radiate from the body. The spines are used for protection, for moving,
and for trapping drifting algae to eat. Among the spines are five paired
rows of tiny tube feet with suckers that help with locomotion,
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capturing food, and holding onto the seafloor. Tiny pedicellarines are
small stinging structures that are used for defense and for obtaining
food. Like all echinoderms, sea urchins do NOT have a brain. The mouth
is claw-like and is located on the underside; it has 5 tooth-like plates
that point inwards and are called Aristotle's lantern. Label the mouth
and color and label the Aristotles lantern red. A food groove or
podia is a ring surrounding the mouth to help move food towards the
mouth. Color and label the podia on the oral surface pink. The anus
and the genital pores are on the top of the sea urchin. The anus is in
the center. Label the anus. Five plates called genital plates surround
the anus. Color and label these red. The genital pores or gonopores
are found in each of these plates. Label the gonopores. Sea urchins
eat plant and animal matter, including kelp, decaying matter, algae,
dead fish, sponges, mussels, and barnacles.
Questions:
1. What does echinoderm mean?
2. Do echinoderms have a brain? A nervous system?
3. How do echinoderms move?
4. Which echinoderm is globular in shape?
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