The Sea Urchin
External Features.—What is the shape of the body? What kind of symmetry has it? Do you find the oral (or mouth) surface? The aboral surface? Where is the body flattened? What is the shape of the spines? What is their use? How are the tube feet arranged? Where do the rows begin and end? Would you think that a sea urchin placed upside down in water, could right itself less or more readily than a starfish? What advantage in turning would each have that the other would not have? The name sea urchin has no reference to a mischievous boy, but means sea hedgehog (French oursin, hedgehog), the name being suggested by its spines.
Fig. 61.—A Sea Urchin crawling up the glass front wall of an aquarium (showing mouth spines and tube feet).
Comparison of Starfish and Sea Urchin.—The water system of the sea urchin, consisting of madreporite, tubes, and water bulbs, or ampullæ, is similar to that of the starfish. The tube feet and locomotion are alike. There is no need for well-developed respiratory organs in either animal, as the whole body, inside and out, is bathed in water. The method of reproduction is the same.
Fig. 62.—A Sea Urchin with spines removed, the limy plates showing the knobs on which the spines grew.
Fig. 63.—Section of Sea Urchin with soft parts removed, showing the jaws which bear the teeth protruding in Fig. [62].
The starfish eats soft animal food. The food of the sea urchin is mainly vegetable, and it needs teeth (Fig. [62], [63]); its food tube is longer than that of a starfish, just as the food tube of a sheep, whose food digests slowly, is much longer than that of a dog.
Fig. 64.—The Sea Otter, an urchin with mouth (o) and vent (A) on same side of body.
The largest species of sea urchins are almost as big as a child’s head, but such size is unusual. The spines are mounted on knobs, and the joint resembles a ball-and-socket joint, and allows a wide range of movement. Some sea urchins live on sandy shores, other species live upon the rocks. The sand dollars are of a lighter colour. (Why)? They are usually flatter and have lighter, thinner walls than the other species. The five-holed sand cake or sand dollar has its weight still further diminished by the holes, which also allow it to rise more easily through the water.
Both starfish and sea urchin rest on the flattened lower surface of the body, while the tube feet are stretching forward for another step.