Form and function of external features
- Key People:
- Alexander Agassiz
General features
Echinoderms have a skeleton composed of numerous plates of mineral calcium carbonate (calcite). Part of the body cavity, or coelom, is a water-vascular system, consisting of fluid-filled vessels that are pushed out from the body surface as tube feet, papillae, and other structures that are used in locomotion, feeding, respiration, and sensory perception. The conspicuous five-rayed, or pentamerous, radial symmetry of living echinoderms tends to obliterate their fundamental bilateral symmetry.
Symmetry and body form
Many of the earliest echinoderms either lacked symmetry or were bilaterally symmetrical. Bilateral symmetry occurs in all living groups and is especially marked in the larval stages. A tendency toward radial symmetry (the arrangement of body parts as rays) developed early in echinoderm evolution and eventually became superimposed upon the fundamental bilateral symmetry, often obliterating it. Radial pentamerous symmetry is conspicuous among all groups of living echinoderms. Although the reasons for the success of radial symmetry are not yet completely understood, it has been suggested that a pentamerous arrangement of skeletal parts strengthens an animal’s skeleton more than would, for example, a three-rayed symmetry.
Pentamerous structure is evident in the arrangement of the tube feet, which usually radiate from the mouth in five bands. Many of the major organ systems, including the water-vascular system, muscles, hemal system (a series of fluid-filled spaces of indeterminate function), and parts of the nervous system are also pentamerous. The skeleton follows a pentamerous pattern, except in holothurians, where it is usually reduced to microscopic ossicles (bones).
Distinct growth patterns among the echinoderms provide some basis for separating the phylum into subphyla. Among homalozoans, the pattern is asymmetrical. In crinozoans and blastozoans, bands of tube feet radiate from the mouth, cross the theca (i.e., sheath or calyx), and extend onto the brachioles or arms; in asterozoans the bands of tube feet radiate outward from the mouth onto the arms to produce a star shape; and in the armless echinozoans, the tube feet form five meridians on the spherical or cylindrical body.
The crinoid (sea lily, feather star) mouth is centrally located on the cup-shaped theca, from which arise a variable number of arms resembling fern fronds. Although five is the primitive number of arms, they branch once or several times in most living forms to produce 10 to 200 arms. Crinoids either are supported on a stem (or stalk) attached to the underside of the theca, or they lack stalks, as is the case with most living forms, and attach themselves by means of slender appendages adapted for grasping (prehensile cirri).
Asteroids have a large central disk from which radiate five or more hollow arms containing parts of the major internal organ systems. The underside (oral surface) of the disk contains a centrally located mouth; the underside of each arm contains five or more bands of tube feet in special grooves called ambulacral furrows. The upper (aboral) surface of the disk has a centrally located anus (often absent) and the sieve plate (madreporite) of the water-vascular system (see below Form and function of internal features). Seven-armed starfish species are not unusual, a deep-sea family has six to 20 arms, and one Antarctic genus may have up to 50 arms. Concentricycloids have a discoid body; the dorsal surface is plated and the ventral surface is naked.
Ophiuroids have a small disk from which five arms radiate. The larger internal organs usually are confined to the disk. The centrally located mouth is on the underside of the disk as are the tube feet, which are not arranged in special grooves. Although most ophiuroids have five arms, a few have six or more, and in one group, the basket stars, the arms are branched to form a complex network.
In echinoids the skeleton forms a rounded, or globular, test of solid plates; tube feet, which emerge through holes in the plates, form five conspicuous bands, or ambulacra. Spaces between bands of feet are called interambulacra. Regular echinoids are roughly spherical in shape, with a centrally located mouth at the junction of the five bands containing tube feet (ambulacra); the anus is located on the side of the body opposite the mouth (aboral). Irregular urchins are elongated or flattened in shape, with the anus on the oral or aboral surface of the body. In regular and some irregular echinoids, the mouth is equipped with five teeth operated by a complex system of plates and muscles called Aristotle’s lantern.
Holothurians are elongated, with mouth and anus at opposite ends of the body. The spaces between the tube feet, which are arranged in five rows, or radii, are known as interradii. The tube feet may be more numerous on the underside of the body than elsewhere, scattered over radii and interradii, or absent. Most holothurians are soft-bodied animals because the skeleton is reduced and the skeletal units, called ossicles or spicules, are microscopic in size. Holothurians usually show bilateral symmetry outside, radial symmetry inside.
Skeleton
The skeleton is dermal but nonetheless conspicuous in echinoderms, with the exception of most holothurians, and forms an effective armour. Each skeletal unit (ossicle) usually consists of two parts, a living tissue (stroma) and a complex lattice (stereom) of mineral calcium carbonate, or calcite, which is derived from the stroma. In living echinoderms, certain properties of calcite are not evident in the stereom because of its latticed structure and the presence of soft stroma. In fossils, however, the stroma may be replaced by secondary calcite (i.e., calcite laid down in continuity with the original skeletal calcite), and recognition of fragments of echinoderm skeletons in fossil strata is easier because no other animal group has the same type of skeleton. Each ossicle is formed from granules in the dermal layer that, after secretion from special lime-secreting cells, enlarge, branch, and fuse to build up a three-dimensional network of calcite. Parts of the skeleton enlarge as an animal grows, and resorption and regeneration of the skeleton may occur.
Echinoderms exhibit a variety of skeletal structures. In the echinoids, a hollow test (skeleton) consisting of 10 columns of plates bears large and small spines as well as pincerlike organs (pedicellariae) used in defense and in the removal of unwanted particles from the body. Pedicellariae, also found in the asteroids, are absent from crinoids, ophiuroids, and holothurians. The complex feeding apparatus (Aristotle’s lantern) of echinoids consists of 40 ossicles held together by muscles and collagenous sutures.
Crinoids have a hollow sheath (theca or calyx) composed of two or three whorls, each consisting of five skeletal plates; the stalk and the slender appendages (cirri) of unstalked forms consist of a series of drum-shaped ossicles. The asteroid skeleton is composed of numerous smooth or spine-bearing ossicles of various shapes held together by muscles and ligaments, permitting flexibility. The arms of asteroids are hollow, those of ophiuroids solid, with the central axis of each arm consisting of elongated ossicles called vertebrae. The microscopically sized ossicles of holothurians are highly variable in form, ranging from flat lattice plates with holes to exquisitely symmetrical wheels, and are usually numerous; one tropical species, for example, has more than 26,000,000 ossicles in its body wall. A ring of plates, called the calcareous ring, surrounds the tube leading from the mouth to the stomach (i.e., the esophagus) of holothurians. Although located in a similar position to that of the echinoid Aristotle’s lantern, the calcareous ring functions as a point of insertion for muscles, not as a feeding apparatus.