Study Guide: Echinoderms

Echinoderms (Phylum: Echinodermata)

Habitat: All are marine (from shallow shores to deep sea)

Symmetry:

Larvae: bilateral

Adults: pentaradial symmetry (five-part)

  • Endoskeleton: Made of calcium carbonate ossicles 

  • Water Vascular System:

    • Hydraulic system used for movement, feeding, and gas exchange

    • Includes tube feet

No true brain: Nerve ring with radial nerves

Regeneration: Many can regrow lost body parts. Sea stars require part of central disc.

Coelomate, deuterostomes: Closely related to chordates evolutionarily


1. Water Vascular System

Components:

   Madreporite (sieve-like entry point for water)

   Stone canal

   Ring canal

   Radial canals

   Ampullae

   Tube feet (podia)

  • Functions:

    • Locomotion

    • Feeding

    • Respiration

2. Body Structure

  • Oral surface: Side with mouth

  • Aboral surface: Opposite side (often contains anus)

  • Ossicles: Internal skeletal plates (may form spines)

3. Digestive System

Usually complete (mouth → anus), though modified in some classes

 

Extant Classes of Echinoderms

1. Asteroidea (Sea Stars / Starfish)

  • Star-shaped with 5+ arms

  • Distinct central disc

  • Tube feet with suction

  • Eversible stomach (can digest prey externally)

  • Predatory (e.g., mollusks)

Key Traits:

  • Regeneration ability

  • Ambulacral grooves on underside


2. Ophiuroidea (Brittle Stars & Basket Stars)

  • Slender, flexible arms distinct from central disc

  • Move by arm rowing, tube feet no used for locomotion due to lack of suckers/suction

Key Traits:

  • Fast movement

  • No anus (waste exits through mouth)

  • Often scavengers or suspension feeders


3. Echinoidea (Sea Urchins & Sand Dollars)

  • No arms; body forms a rigid test (shell)

  • Covered in movable spines

  • Tube feet extend through pores

Key Traits:

  • Specialized feeding structure: Aristotle’s lantern (in urchins)

  • Sand dollars are flattened for burrowing


4. Holothuroidea (Sea Cucumbers)

  • Soft-bodied, elongated

  • Reduced ossicles (not rigid)

  • Tube feet often modified into feeding tentacles

Key Traits:

  • Deposit or suspension feeders

  • Can eject internal organs (evisceration) for defense

  • Gas exchange via respiratory tree


5. Crinoidea (Sea Lilies & Feather Stars)

Most primitive group

Feather-like arms used for filter feeding

Key Traits:

  • Mouth faces upward

  • Tube feet capture food particles

  • Sea lilies are stalked; feather stars are free-moving


Class

Common Name

Body Form

Movement

Feeding Type

Asteroidea

Sea stars

Star-shaped

Tube feet

Predatory

Ophiuroidea

Brittle stars

Thin arms, distinct disc

Arm movement

Scavenger/filter

Echinoidea

Urchins/sand dollars

Spherical/flat

Spines + tube feet

Grazers

Holothuroidea

Sea cucumbers

Elongated, soft

Tube feet/body wall

Deposit/filter

Crinoidea

Sea lilies/feather stars

Feather-like

Tube feet (minimal locomotion)

Suspension