Sea Urchins Do Research urchinpuzzle image
Words to know before you read
  • Embryo- egg after fertilization and before it has developed into a recognizable form.
  • Fertilization- uniting sperm and egg to begin embryo development
  • Indigenous- things living or non-living found naturally in an area
  • Intertidal- the area where land meets water
  • Pentamerous- having five similar parts
  • Subtidal- the area always covered by ocean water
  • Symmetry- equally balanced arrangement
Most images in this article are linked to more information.

Slowly moving across the bottom of the aquarium is a dome-shaped creature, covered by what looks like thick purple toothpicks. The toothpicks are really called spines. Mixed in with the spines are long thin spaghetti shaped tentacles that have the scientific name "tube feet." Many of the tube feet look like they are dancing. They sway back urchin under water and forth in the water while others, with their suction ends, grab onto rocks to help move the creature. It is not alone. There are others with their purple spines and suction-tipped tube feet attached to the clear sides of the aquarium. This is the world for our desert dwelling purple urchin, Strongylocentrotus purpuratus (strong-e-low-cent-row-tus / purp-er-ot-us).

No, urchins are not indigenous to the desert. The usual home for Strongylocentrotus purpuratus is the ocean's rocky floor or grazing along the intertidal and subtidal areas. Sea urchins, are one species of the over 6000 echinoderms, which are in the scientific class Animalia and a member of the group known as invertebrates starfish (animals without backbones). Echinoderms are known for their round symmetry. The symmetry most often has five equal parts, easily seen when looking at another echinoderm, the starfish and its five radial arms.

Except for their round shape, the symmetry of sea urchins are more difficult to view. It is not easy to see they have five point radial design that makes them pentamerous like their cousin the starfish. One thing you can see with both the urchin and the starfish are their tube feet, complete with individual suction-cup ends. They use these "feet" to move. By attaching a tube foot to tube feet icon a rock an urchin can pull themselves along the rocky bottom and sides of their ocean home. A single tube foot is not enough to move an urchin, but using large numbers of its hundreds of tube feet it can make its way along the ocean floor.

If you take a closer look at our urchin, still moving across the bottom of the aquarium, you would notice that there are two openings. There is the opening on its bottom where the mouth is located. This area is called Aristotle's lantern , a structure unique to echinoderms. The lantern is a complex system of small bones and muscles that surrounds the esophagus and is used to scrape algae (urchins favorite food) off rocks during feeding. The other opening is located at the top of the urchin and is called the aboral (no mouth) end. Waste products exit the aboral end and is also the place where eggs or sperm are secreted.

urchin eggs icon Our urchin is part of a group that will be helping scientists understand the mystery of animal development by answering questions about egg fertilization and embryonic development. Sea urchins have been used for many years by scientists to study developmental processes such as fertilization. Because they have relatively big eggs and in large numbers they're ideal animals to study. When secreted, the eggs of S. purpuratus, appear orange in color. Mixing the eggs from a female with the sperm from a male in sea water, developmental processes such as egg and embryo development can be studied.

 

Quiz yourself on the information you just read in this article!
  Have some more fun with our puzzles based on this article or another article at Ask a Biologist.
  

Here are some other places to read and learn about sea urchins and echinoderms.

On the Web:

There are hundreds of sites on the web, but their web addresses often change. It is best to look for them using a search engine like HOTBOT using the key words echinoderms and sea urchins. 

Activities: 

Sea Urchin Embryology for high school and lower college division students. 

Books:

Sea Stars, Sea Urchins, and Allies by Gordon Hendler, John E. Miller, David L. Pawson, and Porter M. Kier

Research Page


ABOUT THIS SITE | SUBMIT A QUESTION | FEEDBACK | FRONT PAGE
EXPERIMENTS AND STUFF | ARTICLES AND PROFILES | WEB LINKS | GALLERY

ABOUT THIS SITE SUBMIT A QUESTION FEEDBACK ASK A BIOLOGIST FRONT PAGE BACK YARD EXPERIMENTS ARTICLES AND PROFILES BIOLOGY WEB LINKS GALLERY