In the body of the Starfish (Fig. 3) the arms are seen to be continuous with the disk and to contain portions or prolongations of the chief organs. The middle of the arm is occupied by two rows of hard pieces (ambulacral ossicles), the fellows of which make an open angle with each other, and so form an open ambulacral groove; along this we find the suckers, the water-canal that supplies them, the blood-vessel of the arm, and a nerve-cord. At the centre of the disk is the mouth. The ossicles at the sides of the arms bear spines, which vary in different species; the surface of the back is supported by a network of hard pieces, and through the intervening spaces there project membranous pouches, which are respiratory in function. The modified plate on the upper surface opens into a tube by means of which the water-vessels communicate with the exterior; this plate is known as the madreporite (Fig. 2, m).

The organs for masticating the food are most highly developed in the regular Echinoids, where the complex apparatus known as the “Lantern of Aristotle” is found (Case 38) to consist of five sets of pieces; the tooth is strong and bevelled at its free end; it is supported by triangular jaws on either side, a pair uniting and having the form of an inverted pyramid; these alveoli are connected with their neighbours by oblong pieces (falces); above these there are elongated bars, which are hinged on to the inner end of the falces and have their outer ends free. The whole lantern is connected to the test by muscles which pass from its sides to the auricles or upstanding pillars which lie round the mouth; and, owing to this muscular apparatus, the teeth are capable of complicated and various movements.

In the Ophiuroids the edges of the mouth-slits are provided with short spinous processes, varying a good deal in arrangement, but never having, apparently, any other function than that of a filtering-apparatus; in the Starfishes the plates round the mouth have a supporting function only; in Crinoids and Holothurians the mouth is unarmed; the latter are often remarkable for a deposit of calcareous plates in the walls of the gullet, and in the former the grooves on the arms are the lines along which food comes to the mouth.

Echinoids live on seaweeds and the animals that are found on them; such as have no teeth, like Spatangus (Case 32), use their spout-like mouth to take up the sand and débris on which they move, and from which they extract some nutriment. Ophiuroids live on the smaller foraminifera; Asteroids on dead fishes (as line-fishermen well know), oysters, and other molluscs, and even on specimens of their own particular species; Holothurians on shell or coral débris and the minute organisms it contains; and Crinoids on small tests of foraminifera and on the adults of small and larvæ of larger crustacea.

In a number of Echinoids and Asteroids some of the spines are specially modified to act as seizing-organs—the free end being divided into two, three, or rarely four pieces, which are moved on one another by special muscles. These minute organs were regarded by earlier observers as parasites, and were named pedicellariæ; they may be movable, when they have a stalk, or the stalk may be absent and the valves sessile. Considerable difficulty attaches to the determination of the use that these organs may be to their possessors; but there is reason to suppose that they may act as cleansing-organs by removing minute particles of dirt, and as temporary organs of fixation, while M. Prouho has observed their use as organs of defence.

Echinoderms move but little; the unstalked Crinoids, if they cannot find stones or worm-tubes around which to attach themselves, swim by beating the water with their delicate arms, five being raised and five depressed alternately. The Echinoid or Asteroid is able to move by the aid of its podia or so-called ambulacral feet, which become erected by being filled with water, and are then contracted; by means of this contraction movement is effected; a similar kind of locomotion obtains with the pedate Holothurians; in the Ophiuroids the flexible arms either serve as the organs of movement, or act as an apparatus whereby the creature becomes coiled round the branches of corals (see Case 20).

Echinoderms are often of exceedingly bright colours, as is shown by the pictures on the wall, and are very conspicuous objects; this may, apparently, be associated with disagreeable tastes or odours; sometimes they cover themselves over with seaweed, and so hide their brilliancy; the spines of some forms are exceedingly painful to the touch, and the stout plates of some of the Goniasters must form admirable organs of protection. The power of restoring lost or injured parts is one of the most remarkable points in the Echinoderm organization (see Case 6).

Echinoderms are of great geological age, and were very abundant in earlier periods of the world’s history. Two groups (the Blastoids and Cystids) have completely disappeared, and the Stalked Crinoids (Lily-Encrinites) are far less common than they used to be. Echinoderms are now found in all seas, and extend to great depths of ocean; many of the species have exceedingly wide areas of distribution, and most are characterized by their gregarious habits, a large number of specimens of a single species being generally obtained by the dredge. They are most abundant in the tropical seas.

Most Echinoderms lay their eggs in the water, where the larvæ are developed and swim about freely; but in a few (Hemiaster, Ophiacantha vivipara, and others) the young do not pass through any metamorphosis, for the eggs are placed in special pouches of the body of the parent, in which they are hatched. The free-swimming larvæ of the other Echinoderms pass through a series of remarkable changes (Figs. 4 and 5); these are illustrated by the twelve models of various forms of larvæ exhibited in Case 36; in Case 35 is a set of models showing in detail the changes undergone by a single species (Asterina gibbosa). A portion only of the body of the larva is converted into the substance of the perfect animal; the rest is either absorbed by the growing animal, or shrivels up and disappears.