Skip to main content Skip to Search Box

Echinodermata

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(Әkī´´nōdûr'mӘtӘ) [Gr.,=spiny skin], phylum of exclusively marine bottom-dwelling invertebrates having external skeletons of calcareous plates just beneath the skin. The plates may be solidly fused together, as in sea urchins , loosely articulated to facilitate movement, as in sea stars (starfish), or reduced to minute spicules in the skin, as in sea cucumbers . The skin usually has warty projections or spines, or both. Echinoderms display pentamerous radial symmetry, that is, the body can be divided into five more or less similar portions around a central axis. Unlike other radially symmetrical animals, they develop from a bilaterally symmetrical larva and retain some degree of bilateral symmetry as adults. There is no head; the surface containing the mouth (the underside, in sea stars and most others) is called the oral surface, and the opposite side, which usually bears the anus, the aboral surface. There are five living classes of echinoderms. The radially symmetrical body cavity…
278 results
Sea urchin

Sharp, barbed spines project from the...
Echinoderms are found in seas and oceans all over the world. They includestarfish, sea urchins, brittlestars, sea cucumbers, and sea lilies and featherstars.Many are vividly colored. This is because of special pigment cells in the skin. Insome species, these cells are sensitive to light and the…
| 842 words , 14 images
Key concepts:
PHYLUM ECHINODERMATA
This phylum contains approximately 6000 living species of exclusively marine animals. The group has an extensive evolutionary history extending back to the Cambrian and including over 20,000 described fossil species. As a group, they are immediately recognizable by their pentaradial (five-rayed) …
| 274 words , 2 images
Key concepts:

Full text Article Echinodermata

From Penguin Dictionary of Biology
Phylum of marine and invertebrate deuterostomes; typically with pentaradiate symmetry as adults; an internal skeleton of calcareous plates in the dermis; TUBE FEET ; nervous system typically one circular and five longitudinal nerve cords, lacking brain and ganglia; surface epithelium often ciliated, …
| 101 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article echinoderm

From Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
Any of various marine invertebrates (phylum Echinodermata) characterized by a hard spiny covering, a calcite skeleton, and five-rayed radial body symmetry. About 6,500 existing species are grouped in six classes: feather stars and sea lilies (Crinoidea), starfishes (Asteroidea), brittle stars and…
| 130 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article Echinodermata

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
(Әkī´´nōdûr'mӘtӘ) [Gr.,=spiny skin], phylum of exclusively marine bottom-dwelling invertebrates having external skeletons of calcareous plates just beneath the skin. The plates may be solidly fused together, as in sea urchins , loosely articulated to facilitate movement, as in sea stars (starfish), …
| 1,963 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article ANIMAL: ECHINODERMATA

From Gaither's Dictionary of Scientific Quotations
American humorist and critic For anyone who has ever considered the bizarre panoply that composes the Echinodermata, it is difficult to lose sight of the fact that echinoderms are strange. Their ontogenetic twists and turns of symmetry, absence of certain familiar organ systems, and presence of some…
| 113 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article Echinodermata

From A Concise Dictionary of Paleontology
“spine skin,” a phylum of marine, mostly benthic animals known definitively from the late Ediacaran to the present, with about 7,000 extant and 13,000 extinct named species. The largest phylum with no terrestrial or freshwater representatives, it is characterized by a rough or spiny skin, pentameral…
| 111 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article Echinodermata

From Merriam-Webster's Medical Dictionary
| 44 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article Echinodermata

From The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia with Atlas and Weather Guide
| 11 words
Key concepts:

Full text Article sea cucumber

From The Columbia Encyclopedia
any of the flexible, elongated echinoderms belonging to the class Holothuroidea. Although sea cucumbers have the basic echinoderm radial symmetry (see Echinodermata ), they do not have arms like starfish. Instead the oral-anal distance is greatly increased, resulting in the typical cucumber-shaped…
| 351 words
Key concepts:
Mind Map

Stack overflow
More Library Resources