Echinodermata! Starfish! Sea Urchins! Sea Cucumbers! Stone Lillies! Feather Stars! Blastozoans! Sea Daisies! Marine invertebrates found throughout the world's oceans with a rich and ancient fossil legacy. Their biology and evolution includes a wide range of crazy and wonderful things. Let me share those things with YOU!
Thursday, September 27, 2012
Some amazing pelagic invertebrate images from Solvin Zanki!
I discovered this really great photoset on Flickr by photographer Solvin Zanki and even though there's no echinoderms and the beasts in question are pelagic (most echinos are bottom dwellers) I thought i would put out an extra this week for these exceptional images...
My understanding is that most of these are from a cruise off Angola (west coast of Africa)..
Phronima-an amphipod that "burrows" into salps and lives in their husks...
like this...
Gigantocypris muelleri- a deep sea ostracod (crustacean with two valves)
A swimming polychaete with its proboscis (jaw) extended..
A swimming snail called Clio recurva
A swimming tomopterid polychaete.. (swimming worm with paddles instead of legs)
Red deep-sea amphipod
Planktonic copepod
Magnapinna atlantica Squid up close
here's the rest of it...
You can go here to see the full photo set!
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Fantastic pics of larvae and baby sea urchins!
Today..some great images of larval sea urchins from 2 researcher/photographers!
First some great video and images from Bruno C. Vellutini from Brazil and currently at the Sars International Centre for Marine Molecular Biology
Bruno is also an exceptional photographer and has been kind enough to allow his images to be shared with us.. Here are samples of his excellent work, much of which are of larval forms-that is the small swimming "babies" that form and settle out into the five-part adults that we are more familiar with..
Here is a quick video that shows the life cyle in a "sea biscuit" aka a sea urchin called Clypeaster subdepressus. Basically, egg and sperm meet, form free swimming bilateral larvae which then settles out on the sea bottom and grows up into a pentameral adult!
A Sea Biscuit's Life from Bruno Vellutini on Vimeo.
Larvae are very tiny.. and are on the order of about a 1.0 mm in length at best.
Here's some striking images from different points during the cycle...
The SKELETON of a larval Clypeaster urchin! Under polarized light..
Pluteus larva showing its left side
Still with 4 arms..
A neat color image showing both sides
A sea biscuit juvenile
A pic of a young sand dollar..
Here are some pics of various VERY tiny..baby urchins!
From Juan Camilo Jaramillo -a researcher at the Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano in Columbia! (on Flickr)
A larval urchin showing a spectacular glow!
A 1.0 mm Diadema (long black spined urchin when adult)
A small, newly settled unidentified urchin
NEXT WEEK! I promise some solid Echinoblogging!
First some great video and images from Bruno C. Vellutini from Brazil and currently at the Sars International Centre for Marine Molecular Biology
Bruno is also an exceptional photographer and has been kind enough to allow his images to be shared with us.. Here are samples of his excellent work, much of which are of larval forms-that is the small swimming "babies" that form and settle out into the five-part adults that we are more familiar with..
Here is a quick video that shows the life cyle in a "sea biscuit" aka a sea urchin called Clypeaster subdepressus. Basically, egg and sperm meet, form free swimming bilateral larvae which then settles out on the sea bottom and grows up into a pentameral adult!
A Sea Biscuit's Life from Bruno Vellutini on Vimeo.
Larvae are very tiny.. and are on the order of about a 1.0 mm in length at best.
Here's some striking images from different points during the cycle...
The SKELETON of a larval Clypeaster urchin! Under polarized light..
Pluteus larva showing its left side
Still with 4 arms..
A neat color image showing both sides
A sea biscuit juvenile
A pic of a young sand dollar..
Here are some pics of various VERY tiny..baby urchins!
From Juan Camilo Jaramillo -a researcher at the Universidad Jorge Tadeo Lozano in Columbia! (on Flickr)
A larval urchin showing a spectacular glow!
A 1.0 mm Diadema (long black spined urchin when adult)
A small, newly settled unidentified urchin
NEXT WEEK! I promise some solid Echinoblogging!
Sunday, September 23, 2012
UPDATE! Ophiothela brittle stars Invade the Atlantic!
UPDATE: New pictures provided by Gustavo Beolchi show Ophiothela from Angra in Brazil..
on sponges..
on a gorgonain
BEFORE....
A recent alert went out from ophiuroid biologist at the Los Angeles County Museum- Dr. Gordon Hendler that a six-rayed brittle star from the Indo-Pacific has invaded the Atlantic!
A pdf account of this from Coral Reefs can be downloaded here.
Invasive species are those which are artificially introduced into regions where they are not native. Their presence can directly or indirectly have significant to dire consequences on the ecology of a particular region.
Ophiothela is a clonal, six-armed brittle star that typically occurs in the Indo-Pacific as seen here (species shown is Ophiothela danae). Photo by Wild Singapore.
Wild Singapore has a great page on these (note that not all of these seem to be Ophiothela however)
go here to see it!
But Ophiothela mirabilis seems to have invaded Brazil and St. Vincent as reported above. The species was first observed in Brazil of 2000 and has been observed slowly spreading throughout Brazil and the Caribbean.
This brittle star is asexual, specifically it is fissiparous and so it clones itself, thus facilitating its spread. Unlike other tiny commensal brittle stars, this one seems to have "low host specificity" which means that it can live on just about anything that it is compatible with (as seen below) from gorgonians to sponges..
Courtesy of the Brazillian website Cifonauta here is one of several videos of this invasive species in Brazil! They have several more pictures of this species also...
on sponges..
on a gorgonain
BEFORE....
A recent alert went out from ophiuroid biologist at the Los Angeles County Museum- Dr. Gordon Hendler that a six-rayed brittle star from the Indo-Pacific has invaded the Atlantic!
A pdf account of this from Coral Reefs can be downloaded here.
Invasive species are those which are artificially introduced into regions where they are not native. Their presence can directly or indirectly have significant to dire consequences on the ecology of a particular region.
Ophiothela is a clonal, six-armed brittle star that typically occurs in the Indo-Pacific as seen here (species shown is Ophiothela danae). Photo by Wild Singapore.
Wild Singapore has a great page on these (note that not all of these seem to be Ophiothela however)
go here to see it!
But Ophiothela mirabilis seems to have invaded Brazil and St. Vincent as reported above. The species was first observed in Brazil of 2000 and has been observed slowly spreading throughout Brazil and the Caribbean.
This brittle star is asexual, specifically it is fissiparous and so it clones itself, thus facilitating its spread. Unlike other tiny commensal brittle stars, this one seems to have "low host specificity" which means that it can live on just about anything that it is compatible with (as seen below) from gorgonians to sponges..
Courtesy of the Brazillian website Cifonauta here is one of several videos of this invasive species in Brazil! They have several more pictures of this species also...
Can Crowd-Sourcing Help???
A quick look on Flickr indeed shows Ophiothela mirabilis as observed on Polymastia janeirensis (a sponge) from João Fernandes Beach - Buzios - RJ - Brazil (image from August 16, 2009). O. mirabilis is the tiny little orange thing clinging on below...
Photo by "Sea Girl".
Here's another pic from Brazil of what look to be Ophiothela (or maybe not hard to say without a close up) wrapped around what the photographer calls Leptogorgia punicea (a gorgonian)
The many eyes and cameras of the internet permit greater powers of tracking and observation of this species! Got one from the Atlantic? Post links to pics in the comments! Or contact me (or Dr. Hendler) for more info!
A quick look on Flickr indeed shows Ophiothela mirabilis as observed on Polymastia janeirensis (a sponge) from João Fernandes Beach - Buzios - RJ - Brazil (image from August 16, 2009). O. mirabilis is the tiny little orange thing clinging on below...
Photo by "Sea Girl".
Here's another pic from Brazil of what look to be Ophiothela (or maybe not hard to say without a close up) wrapped around what the photographer calls Leptogorgia punicea (a gorgonian)
The many eyes and cameras of the internet permit greater powers of tracking and observation of this species! Got one from the Atlantic? Post links to pics in the comments! Or contact me (or Dr. Hendler) for more info!
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
Deep-Sea Swimming Sea Cucumbers and the "most bizarre holothurian species in existence"!
(image by Neptune Canada!)
This week! Everyone has seen them but what do we actually KNOW about SWIMMING sea cucumbers?? Let's find out!Sea cucumbers are the very wormiest looking of echinoderms. In one sense-they resemble giant earthworms, in that they digest organic particles from the sediment which they pick up with their feeding "arms" which places food into their mouth.
They eat and they poop. The organics are processed through their intestine and left as "clean" castings via the other end. They live mostly on sea bottoms.
Sea cucumbers of course, do many neat things such as expell their gus as a defense and provide habitat for fish! and they are ecologically important.
But in the deep-sea, sea cucumbers become the oddest of the odd!!
You have probably seen them around the internet..such as this Enypniastes which has "made the rounds" from awhile back
We actually know some stuff about the biology of these animals and I asked myself last week "WHY have I never written these up before??" So, LET's GO! Data for this paper is actually available for download from the Smithsonian Digital Repository: Miller & Pawson, 1990 in the Smithsonian Contributions to the Marine Sciences # 35! Plus other citations as mentioned below.
Dave Pawson was gracious to help provide info for the first three points..
1. There are Different KINDS of Swimming Behavior!
Facultative aka The Cuke CAN swim but only in an emergency! It turns out that most sea cucumbers are capable of some kind of swimming behavior but most only do so as an "extreme" response to predators.
For example, this shallow water North Pacific sea cucumber Parastichopus can undulate its body and move out of the way when it senses the predatory sunflower star (Pycnopodia) in close proximity.
Benthopelagic
So, the word "benthos" refers to the bottom and "pelagios" refers to the watery 3-D space that exists above it which makes up most of the ocean. Some animals (not just sea cucumbers) actually live a life that places them somewhere in between the two.. Hence the name.. "bentho-pelagic."
It turns out that MANY species of "swimming" sea cucumber only spend PART of their life actually swimming. You can see this in this video.. It lands and takes off again..
More detail on the mouth with the feeding arms shown in a radiating pattern around the mouth..
Pelagothuria is known primarily from the deeps of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Ocean between 596 to 6776 meters.
We actually know some stuff about the biology of these animals and I asked myself last week "WHY have I never written these up before??" So, LET's GO! Data for this paper is actually available for download from the Smithsonian Digital Repository: Miller & Pawson, 1990 in the Smithsonian Contributions to the Marine Sciences # 35! Plus other citations as mentioned below.
Dave Pawson was gracious to help provide info for the first three points..
- Proper swimming sea cucumbers haven't been observed to eviscerate (expel intestines as a defense) like the shallow ones do, in fact, its unclear if they eviscerate at all.
- The bodies of swimming sea cucumbers are often VERY gelatinous and composed mostly of water, such that they are often neutrally buoyant-and are often "pushed" around by currents created by nearby submersibles.
- Its thought that a large proportion of sea cucumbers are capable of swimming.
- All "proper" deep-sea cukes live in the deep-sea.. often in the neighborhood of 500-6000 meters deep! (Mt. Everest is about 8848 meters tall) and individual species are often occur widely-so the SAME SPECIES might be present in several different oceans!
1. There are Different KINDS of Swimming Behavior!
Facultative aka The Cuke CAN swim but only in an emergency! It turns out that most sea cucumbers are capable of some kind of swimming behavior but most only do so as an "extreme" response to predators.
For example, this shallow water North Pacific sea cucumber Parastichopus can undulate its body and move out of the way when it senses the predatory sunflower star (Pycnopodia) in close proximity.
Benthopelagic
So, the word "benthos" refers to the bottom and "pelagios" refers to the watery 3-D space that exists above it which makes up most of the ocean. Some animals (not just sea cucumbers) actually live a life that places them somewhere in between the two.. Hence the name.. "bentho-pelagic."
It turns out that MANY species of "swimming" sea cucumber only spend PART of their life actually swimming. You can see this in this video.. It lands and takes off again..
A paper by the Japanese deep-sea biologist Suguru Ohta (which you can download here) studied the deep-sea swimming sea cucumber Enypniastes in Japan.
Ohta-san produced this excellent diagram showing the swimming behavior of Enypniastes relative to the direction of the current and the swimming behavior/motion/actions of the animal.
Figure 11 from Ohta1985 in the Journal of the Oceanographical Society of Japan |
The images below showing various stages of swimming in Enypniastes are from the SERPENT Media Archive via the Encyclopedia of Life!
At a recent scientific gathering, it was noted that upon "take off" Enypniastes will Poop!
..the ubiquitous swimmer Enypniastes eximia always swims down to the bottom to load up its intestine with delicious mud (and it feeds very rapidly for a sea cucumber, stuffing handfuls of sediment into its mouth as if there's no tomorrow), and then it swims away with a full intestine.
An image presented below shows this behavior as the animal has "landed". You can see the feeding tentacles which gather fine flaky organic matter called "marine snow" and put it into its mouth.
Another awesome image from the SERPENT Media Archive at EOL |
An aside: sea cucumbers such as this weird fellow called Psychropotes mostly "facultative"-they can swim... but need a good reason to as adults.
Image by Lenaick LEP via the Encyclopedia of Life! |
BUT apparently as juveniles (as shown below) they are benthopelagic and CAN swim. Is that what that big weird "lobe" is for?? Still kind of a mystery.. This image below is from a paper by Dave Billett at Southampton Oceanographic Cener and colleagues in this paper
Potentially, this shows that behavior can be complex and related to things like growth.
TRULY PELAGIC
So far we've only seen sea cucumbers that swim but are not actually pelagic.. that is, they do not LIVE in the three dimensional space of the ocean like a jellyfish.
but there is ONE species which DOES SWIM ALL the time. In other words a TRUE swimming sea cucumber. Let me introduce you to Pelagothuria natatrix. Miller and Pawson describe this species as "...perhaps the most bizarre holothurian species in existence."
and yes.. it does have that Lovecraftian/Elder Thing-Mountains of Madness vibe going on doesn't it??
Image by Katulu on Flickr |
Why? Here are some drawings of the animal. The mouth and feeding arms face "upwards" and are recognizable but they sit at the center of a jellyfish-like veil on strongly gelatinous body.
Diagrams below are scanned from the description of Ludwig, 1894 on the University of Washington Freshwater and Marine Digital bank. Total length of these animals is about 16 centimeters (so about 6 inches long)
Here is the veil extended. Mouth facing upward... That veil/umbrella? seems to be formed from the tube feet or podia modified into this swimming apparatus.More detail on the mouth with the feeding arms shown in a radiating pattern around the mouth..
and more detail on the feeding arms at center and the tentacle-like veil around it. Miller and Pawson report that its food apparently consists of pelagic food sources: organic particles in the water, pelagic snail shells and other small floating debris.
Pelagothuria is known primarily from the deeps of the Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Ocean between 596 to 6776 meters.
Here are pictures from Miller and Pawson's monograph which show some of the few images of the animal alive.
2. Why Do Swimming Sea Cucumbers Swim??
Miller and Pawson offer several possible reasons:
3. How many different KINDS of swimming sea cucumbers are there and how are they different from "typical" sea cucumbers??
There are swimming sea cucumbers in ALL of the major groups of sea cucumbers. Miller and Pawson summarize accounts and find 25 different species that have been recorded swimming or are capable of swimming even a little. Five of those seem to be shallow-water with the remaining inhabiting deep-water.
Realize that a sea cucumber that is ACTING LIKE A JELLYFISH is pretty frakkin' WEIRD even for an echinoderm.
2. Why Do Swimming Sea Cucumbers Swim??
Miller and Pawson offer several possible reasons:
- Avoiding Predators. The facultative swimmers obviously run in response to a predator-so why not the others? Swimming takes them out of harms way quickly and effectively.
- Escape Physical Danger. Swimming sea cucumbers can maneuver themselves out of the way of underwater mudslides and other physical hazards.
- Getting around aka "dispersal". Swimming or floating is a good way of getting around to find food, spread your genetic material. Many species are cosmopolitan-that is, they are found in ALL the world's oceans.
- Go Where the food is. Remember when I wrote about sea pigs? What those sea cucumbers and others LOVE more than anything is fresh, delicious goo and junk that has just fallen onto the sea floor. Swimming is one way to pursue that tasty, yummy food.
- Absorb nutrients from the water. Could there also be further dissolved food (organic matter) that the animals could absorb through their body wall?
3. How many different KINDS of swimming sea cucumbers are there and how are they different from "typical" sea cucumbers??
There are swimming sea cucumbers in ALL of the major groups of sea cucumbers. Miller and Pawson summarize accounts and find 25 different species that have been recorded swimming or are capable of swimming even a little. Five of those seem to be shallow-water with the remaining inhabiting deep-water.
Most deep-sea swimming cukes belong to the families Pelagothuriidae, Elpidiide, Psychropotidae, and the Synallactidae with the adaptations for swimming seemingly haven arisen in the evolution of sea cucumbers at different times in their history.
4. What else is there about swimming sea cucumbers that you aren't telling me??
4. What else is there about swimming sea cucumbers that you aren't telling me??
At least a couple species glow in the dark! Enypniastes is thought to use its bioluminescence to scare off potential predators. See this paper for more..
Whew!
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
Feather Stars (crinoids) and their look-alike camouflaged shrimp!!
So you know how some people look like their pets? Well one could say that the same goes for crinoids and their shrimp!
Tiny little commensal crustaceans that live camouflaged and hidden among the feathery arms and striking colors of a crinoids' arms! Presumably, the crinoids provide some protection from predators.
This one for example in stunning green from Nudi Falls in Sulawasi... Image by "EcoDivers1"
Another green one (identified as Laomenes cornutus) from the Philippines. Image by "MatYie_00" (Mohd Syukri Mazlan)
Here is a nice little video about how crinoid shrimp VANISH along with their host..
crinoid shrimp from Steve Clark on Vimeo.
Blue and orange! Identified as Periclimenes amboinensis by the photographer. Image by "avloetscher"
A blue/yellow one.. by "funseadiving"
Can you find the yellow shrimp? (Perilimenes commensalis)
Yellow and purplish! from Indonesia. Image by "FrogfishPhotos"
A zebra colored one.. Identified by the photographer as Periclimenes. Image by "PacificKlaus"
Another one with the same color from the Philippines. Image by "scubaschnauzer"
A video of a similar colored one from Japan
and sometimes clingfish (Fiji) get in on the action! Image by Mark Atwell.
AWKWARD!! (great moment from Sulawesi) Image by "Christian Loader"
Hopefully, next week I will be able to put together a PROPER post for you guys! Seeya then!
Tiny little commensal crustaceans that live camouflaged and hidden among the feathery arms and striking colors of a crinoids' arms! Presumably, the crinoids provide some protection from predators.
This one for example in stunning green from Nudi Falls in Sulawasi... Image by "EcoDivers1"
Another green one (identified as Laomenes cornutus) from the Philippines. Image by "MatYie_00" (Mohd Syukri Mazlan)
Here is a nice little video about how crinoid shrimp VANISH along with their host..
crinoid shrimp from Steve Clark on Vimeo.
Blue and orange! Identified as Periclimenes amboinensis by the photographer. Image by "avloetscher"
A blue/yellow one.. by "funseadiving"
Can you find the yellow shrimp? (Perilimenes commensalis)
Yellow and purplish! from Indonesia. Image by "FrogfishPhotos"
A zebra colored one.. Identified by the photographer as Periclimenes. Image by "PacificKlaus"
Another one with the same color from the Philippines. Image by "scubaschnauzer"
A video of a similar colored one from Japan
and sometimes clingfish (Fiji) get in on the action! Image by Mark Atwell.
AWKWARD!! (great moment from Sulawesi) Image by "Christian Loader"
Hopefully, next week I will be able to put together a PROPER post for you guys! Seeya then!
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