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Even other echinoderms seem to have the defense thing worked out!
Sea urchins got spines. Like these.
Sea cucumbers got that evisceration/gut spewing thing (uh...I'll describe this later but its just gross!).
Crinoids can get all swimmy and do all sorts of things to escape. Click here to see some.
Ophiuroids got arms they can drop.
But starfish? How are these seemingly innocuous creatures able to protect themselves?
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Today...a survey of what sea stars use to defend themselves against their various predators and adversaries.
What are starfish usually worried about? Usually fish...but also crabs, and sometimes other echinoderms...
1. Chemical Defenses. So, this is the one most people seem to miss, but its probably one of the most important. Most starfish have specific type of organic chemical called SAPONINS in their body wall.
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So, fishes and other predators basically learn that starfish are just AWFUL. In vertebrates, such as cats and/or dogs eating starfish and being poisoned by sapoinins can cause vomiting, nausea, and other unpleasant effects. Humans should take this hint and go with it...
Some species, such as this Astropecten polyacanthus have kicked their defenses up a notch and instead of (or possibly in addition to?) saponins, their body walls contain the deadly TETRODOTOXIN. Tetrodotoxins have this chemical structure and function as nerve-blockers that can result in a variety of unpleasant outocmes including death. Pure Tetrodotoxin is 100 times MORE poisonous then potassium cyanide.
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Chemical defense also include the production of SERIOUS amounts of toxic materials such as MUCUS (grammar factoid! Mucus=noun. Mucous=adjective!) in the "slime star" Pteraster tessellatus (and probably all of its relatives in the Pterasteridae.)
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2. Armor & Spines. One of the more obvious features one sees in starfish, especially in tropical species is the presence of heavily developed armor and armament, such as the spines in this Protoreaster nodosus.
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Its thought that these armored bodies are part of why these starfish are so successful.
For example, here's the underside of the starfish Tosia. The tube foot groove is flanked by thick blunt spines.
In the New Zealand Pentagonaster, there are big, thick armor plates that cover over the armtips.
If predation pressure is that much higher in the tropics-that may drive the evolution and diversification of tropical starfish species..
The crown of thorns starfish, Acanthaster planci is a big ol' starfish bad-ass. Its got the morphological defenses...the sharp spines AND it has saponins in its body wall.
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3. Regeneration. Finally...most people are pretty aware of how starfish regenerate...
There's a LOT more I can write about regeneration but the video covers the basics...
One interesting point, however, is also brought up by this paper by Marrs et al. 2000 on arm damage in the North Atlantic Asterias rubens.
They hypothesize that larger individuals have "increased mechancial toughness" and that this replaces the shedding of arms (i.e., autotomy) as an antipredator strategy. There may be a size-related decline in the efficiency of the autotomy mechanism through the relaxation of selection pressure (i.e., the influence of predators).
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