Echinoderms (starfishes, crinoids, sea urchins, and their relatives)
are often radially symmetrical as adults, but their embryonic stages
show similarities to the chordates.
Phylum Echinodermata: Animals with a unique water-vascular system, using sea water as a circulatory fluid. Several embryonic similarities to chordates, including a true coelom, which develops as an enterocoel. Change of symmetry in many cases, from a bilateral larva to a radial adult, typically in a 5-fold pattern. Protective plates or shells frequently made of calcium carbonate and armed with bumps or spines. High ability to regenerate lost parts. Sessile (attached) echinoderms (Homalozoa and Crinozoa): Echinoderms that grow attached include crinoids (sea lilies) and a variety of extinct groups (blastoids, cystoids, carpoids, etc.). Many grow on stalks attached to the bottom. Body cup-shaped, open toward the top, with a mouth in the center of the top surface. Arm-like rays, in multiples of five, grow out and upward from the margins of the mouth. Each ray has a ciliated groove that traps food particles and brings them to the mouth. The earliest fossil forms were irregular and lacked symmetry, but radial symmetry developed early, generally in a 5-fold pattern. Biologists believe that echinoderm ancestors were bilaterally symmetrical and that filter-feeding (filtering small particles of food from the water) made radial symmetry selectively advantageous. Attached echinoderms flourished mainly during Paleozoic times. Today, only a few crinoids remain; other attached echinoderms are extinct. Free-moving echinoderms (Echinozoa and Asterozoa): Mostly bottom-feeding scavengers and predators that attack other invertebrates. The mouth, on the lower surface, faces downward. Branches of the water-vascular system may form foot-like podia, used in locomotion.
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