Category: INVERTEBRATES


TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Arachnida
Order: Araneae
Suborder: Araneomorphae (fangs slope towards each other in a pinching action)
Family: Nephilidae

Genus/species: Nephila madagascariensis

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GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: They have striped legs specialized for weaving (where their tips point inward, rather than outward as is the case with many wandering spiders). In females, the dorsal side of the abdomen has bright yellow markings surrounded by a light gray border. The rest of the body and legs are black with patches of brown. 4.8 – 5.1 cm (1.5 – 2 in) in females, not including leg span, with males being usually 2/3 smaller (less than 2.5 cm, 1 in). Named for yellow threads of their web shine like gold in sunlight not the color of the spider.

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Various species of orb weaving spiders are widely distributed. They exist in the southern United States, Central and South America, Southeast Asia, and the South Pacific. Nephila madagascariensis madagascariensis is found on the island of Madagascar and certain parts of Southern Africa. 

Spinning web below

Golden Orb16121279421_89d739a11a_o

DIET IN THE WILD: Eat insects that get caught in their webs, primarily flying insects. They kill their prey with a venomous bite. While painful, a bite from this spider would not seriously hurt humans.

Golden Orb Weaver

LONGEVITY:: Females usually live about a year, and males about 6 mos.

REMARKS: Golden orb spiders weave large, strong webs out of golden-colored silk which can be as big as 2 m across. The silk strands are reputed to be five times stronger than steel and three times more elastic than Kevlar.
The oldest surviving genus of spiders, with a fossilized specimen known from 165 million years ago.

Rainforest, Madagascar

References

Ron’s WordPress Shortlink: http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-TC

Ron’s flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/sets/72157608653175263/with/3707840635/

California Academy of Sciences: Madagascar Golden Orb Spider exhibit 2014

 iNaturalist www.inaturalist.org/taxa/49758-Nephila

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Class: Holothuroideaia
Order: Aspidochirotida
Family: Stichopodidae

Genus/species: Parastichopus parvimensis

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Colored brown above, lighter below. Conical black-tipped papillae on the dorsal side provide the common name. The mouth and anus are on opposite ends of their cylindrical bodies. Tube feet aide in gathering food as well as ambulating.Length to 25 cm (10 inches). 

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Monterey Bay, California to Baja California. Found on sandy or muddy-sandy soft bottoms between rocks or in eelgrass beds. Sub tidal to 27 m (89 feet) in depth.

DIET: Digests organic detritus and small organisms in soft sediments.

REPRODUCTION?DEVELOPMENT: Have separate sexes (look-alike), and eggs are fertilized externally. Broadcast spawning usually takes place in November, and each female can produce thousands of eggs. After fertilization, a larva is formed which metamorphoses into a Sea Cucumber after a few weeks.

MORTALITY/LONGEVITY: Eaten by sea stars including the sunflower star. Sea otters and humans are also predators. Lifespan estimated to be 5-10 years in the wild.

CONSERVATION: IUCN Red list; Not Evaluated

REMARKS: Holothuroids differ from echinoderms, because they have a water vascular system full of body fluid rather than sea water.  Like other echinoderms, cucumbers have a calcareous skeleton; but in their case it is only vestigial, composed of plates and spicules of lime buried in the skin and serving merely to stiffen the body wall. Respiratory trees are the lungs of a sea cucumber. These hollow branched organs lie inside the body cavity on either side of the posterior intestine. The base of the tree connects to a muscular cavity, or cloaca. Oxygen is transferred across the thin membrane into the fluids of the body cavity. When the oxygen is depleted, the main body wall contracts to squeeze water out of the trees. 
When threatened, it can expel all its internal organs through its anus (evisceration) and grow new ones in 2-4 weeks. It can also expel sticky filaments to ensnare or confuse predators. Warty sea cucumbers and their related species are sometimes called the “earthworms of the sea,” as they cultivate the seafloor in much the same manner as earthworms cultivate the soil. Oral tube feet around the mouth are covered with a sticky mucus that traps food particles from the seafloor’s sediment and mud. In areas where overfishing has reduced the population of sea cucumbers, the seafloor hardens, thus destroying a habitat for other bottom-dwelling creatures. Can walk on tube feet if stressed up to one yard every 15 min..Humans eat a variety of sea cucumber species, including Warty sea cucumbers. The demand is greatest in Asian countries, for consumption and folk medicine applications. It is considered to be widely overfished.

 

 

 

Parastichopus parvimensisIMG_8852 - Version 2

 

References

ADW Animal Diversity Web, U. of Michigan  http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Parastichopus_parvimensis/

Encyclopedia of Life  eol.org/pages/597920/details

Monterey Bay Aquarium  www.montereybayaquarium.org/animal-guide/invertebrates/wa…

Ron’s flickr  https://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/3702926813/in/set-72157608501343477

 Ron’s WordPress Shortlink  wp.me/p1DZ4b-s6

 

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Class: Echinoidea (Sea urchins)
Subclass: Cidaroidea
Order: Cidaroida
Family: Cidaridae

Genus/species: Eucidaris tribuloides

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Brown body with thick spines in all directions. 

Slate Pencil UrchinIMG_1479

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: North Carolina through Brazil, Caribbean, Bahamas, Florida. Found in coral reef crevices, in turtle grass beds, or under rocks and rubble in back reef lagoon areas. Depth to 800 m (usually 50 m). 

 

 

Slate Pencil UrchinIMG_1478

DIET IN THE WILD: Nocturnal omnivore: algae and small invertebrates such as sea squirts and sponges.

Slate Pencil UrchinIMG_0664

REMARKS: The spines of pencil urchins, unlike other urchin groups, are not covered with epidermis. They are, however, often covered with algae and epizoans that provide excellent camouflage. Spines are also covered with barbs that can inflict serious pain to a predator. Seek shelter in rocky crevices by day, using the thick spines to maintain a protected position.

References

Encyclopedia of life eol.org/pages/600976/details

Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute 

biogeodb.stri.si.edu/bocas_database/search/species/1130

Animal Diversity Web animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Eucidaris_tribulo…

Ron’s flickr https://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/4330820247/in/set-72157608501343477

Ron’s WordPress shortlink  http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-1nk

Caribbean  PR36

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Class: Echinoidea
Order: Diadematoida
Family: Diadematidae

Genus/species: Diadema setosum

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS:  Usually black but some or all of them can be grey or white. Very long, black spines are up to 30 cm (1.1 inches). Orange-red ring around anal cone at the center of its dorsal surface is distinctive. Weight 35 gm (1.25 oz) to 80 gm (2.8 oz).  Adult test to 9 cm (3.5 inches) diameter with a distinct pattern of iridophores, usually with 5 white dots.  Height to around 40 mm (1.5 inches) high. 

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DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Red Sea, east Africa to western Pacific (Philippines) in low tide areas to 20 m (66 ft) on rubble and seagrasses. Often abundant in shallow water areas that have been recently disturbed. Also in lagoons and on coral and rocky reefs.

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DIET IN THE WILD: Herbivore. Hides during the day, and emerges at night to feed on algae, plankton, and waste material. Its feeding habits help keep the reef free from coral-smothering algae; however, too many of these algal-eating machines can actually threaten a reef, scraping away living coral as they devour algae and leaving little food for other herbivores.

CONSERVATION: IUCN Red List ; not evaluated.

REMARKS: Uses hundreds of flexible, tube feet to move around, eat and breathe.

The venom is mild and causes swelling and pain, and gradually diffuses over several hours. Tiny hooked barbs often require surgical removal.

Commensal with a number of species, including various shrimps and fishes.

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Sea-grass shallows PR03a

References

Encyclopedia of Life  eol.org/pages/2942801/details

Archive www.arkive.org/long-spined-sea-urchin/diadema-setosum/

WordPress Shortlink  http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-Qv

flickr http://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/sets/72157608501343477/with/4333507132/

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata (“spiny-skinned” animals including sea stars, brittle stars, sea urchins, sand dollars, and sea cucumbers)
Class: Echinoidea  (sea urchins and sand dollars)
Order: Clypeasteroida
Suborder: Scutellina
Family: Dendrasteridae

Genus/species: Dendraster excentricus

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Closely related to sea urchins, except for a more flattened, silver-dollar skeleton (test).
The tube feet, characteristic of echinoderms, are used for locomotion, respiration, sensing the environment, grasping and transporting food particles to the centrally located mouth on the underside of the test, and attachment to the substrate. The anus is near the edge of the test.
Very short spines which are covered with tiny hair-like cilia are closely packed together on the surface which feels like velvet.
Diameter to 8 cm (3.2 inches).

Eccentric Sand Dollar 3289660142_4458838cfd_b

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Southeastern Alaska to Baja California. Found in subtidal to low intertidal zone on sandy or sandy-muddy substrates in cool water near the shore, but deep enough to avoid wave surge. Depth to 40 m (131 feet) but usually shallower.

Eccentric Sand Dollar 3427754072_18f944b159_b

DIET IN THE WILD:  They are oriented flat or more often vertical with entire bed oriented the same way to catch phytoplankton detritus, diatoms, and plankton such as crab larvae and amphipods. They are captured by mucous-covered spines and pincers (pedicillariae). Food particles are then carried to the mouth in the center of the lower body surface by cilia on spines where it is broken up by jaws of a small aristotle’s lantern. The tube feet are also used for grasping and transporting food.

REPRODUCTION: Broadcast spawner. Sperm and eggs are released from separate individuals. After fertilization, free-swimming bilateral larvae form, which eventually change to radially symmetrical individuals that settle to a sandy or muddy substrate similar to sea urchins.

Longevity: averages 10 years.

PREDATORS: Fish, sea stars, crabs, humans.

CONSERVATION: IUCN; Not evaluated.

REMARKS:  Cilia covered spines are used in wave-like motions for movement and burrowing. Tube feet away from the mouth are also used for locomotion. 
Young sand dollars ingest large sand grains that act like a diver’s weight belt to help them maintain position.
The age a sand dollar can be determined by counting the growth rings on the plates of the exoskeleton.

References

U. of Michigan (ADW) Animal Diversity Web  http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Dendraster_excentricus/ 

Walla Walla University  http://www.wallawalla.edu/academics/departments/biology/rosario/inverts/Echinodermata/Class%20Echinoidea/Dendraster_excentricus.html 

Monterey Bay Aquarium  http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/animal-guide/invertebrates/sand-dollar

Ron’s flickr  https://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/3289660142/in/set-72157608501343477

Ron’s WordPress shortlink  http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-1mA

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia – animals
Phylum: Echinodermata Klein – echinoderms
Subphylum: Eleutherozoa
Superclass: Cryptosyringida
Class: Ophiuroidea – basket stars, brittlestars, snake stars
Order: Ophiurida – basket stars, serpent stars, basket stars, serpent stars
Suborder: Iohiura incrassata
Family Ophiodermatidae

Genus/species: Ophiarachna incrassata

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Green with yellow markings and dark-ringed white spots. Disc diameter to 5 cm (2 inches) and arm length to 20 cm (8 inches). Top of arms are wide and flat.

Stout Green Brittle Star8412648309_4004cdfca2_k

DIET IN THE WILD: Nocturnal feeder of  small organisms and detritus.

Stout Green Brittle Star4472769084_f4acdf93f2_o

DIET IN THE WILD: Small organisms and detritus. Nocturnal feeder.

Stout Green Brittle Star8282559749_1cb63a02d1_oReferences

Ron’s flickr  https://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/8412648309/in/set-72157608501343477/

Encyclopedia of life  eol.org/pages/598310/details

Reef Creature Identification, Humann and Deloach 2010, page443

ADW animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/accounts/Ophiarachna_incra…

Ron’s WordPress shortlink  http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-1mb

 

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Class: Ophiuroidea – basket stars, brittlestars, snake stars
Order: Ophiurida – basket stars, serpent stars, basket stars, serpent stars
Family: Ophiodermatidae

Genus/species: Ophiothrix spiculata

 

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Color highly variable: green, green-brown, or green-yellow, and more or less extensively marked with white, grey, orange, red, brown, or pink. Distinguished by serrate or conspicuously prickly spines on the disk and arms. Up to eight serrated and hyaline arm spines with jagged edges, radial symmetry with 5 segments. Disk up to 18mm (0.7 inches) in diameter, arms up to 85 mm (3.3 inches) in length.

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Northern California to Peru; also Galapagos Islands. Found on the continental slope, kelp forest, submarine canyons. sandy and rocky seafloor in shallow waters to great depths from the shoreline down to 2,059 m (6,755 feet).

DIET IN THE WILD: They extend their arms are upward to filter the water for organic particles, small animals. They are nocturnal stretching out to catch food particles, using their small spines to pass the bits down to the central mouth.

PREDATION: When threatened their best form of defense is to slowly crawl away.

 

 

REMARKS: In kelp forests near La Jolla in southern California, millions of them may carpet the seafloor in layers up to an inch thick!

The arms of the spiny brittle star are very delicate and easily break off when the animal is disturbed. These echinoderms are able to replace lost arms in several days.

They are sensitive to light, and when disturbed can create their own light or bioluminescence.

References

Encyclopedia of Life eol.org/pages/598202/details

Monterey Bay Aquariun  http://www.montereybayaquarium.org/animal-guide/invertebrates/spiny-brittle-star

NOAA   http://www8.nos.noaa.gov/onms/park/Parks/SpeciesCard.aspx?pID=3&refID=4&CreatureID=151 

Ron’s flickr  http://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/sets/72157608501343477/

Ron’s WordPress shortlink  http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-gs

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Class: Asteroidea
Order: Valvatida
Family: Goniasteridae

Genus/species: Mediaster aequalis

Vermillion Sea StarIMG_3431

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: 5-rayed sea star has conspicuous marginal plates. Orange to vermillion red. Aboral surface covered with oval or flat-topped hexagonal plates (ossicles). Oral side lighter. Up to 20 cm ( 7.9 inches) diameter.

 Vermillion Sea StarIMG_5328

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Alaska south to southern California. Common in subtidal waters; rarely exposed to the air. Found especially in rocky areas; occasionally on sand and gravel. Depth to 1,784 m (5,800 feet) max.

DIET IN THE WILD: Omnivorous: sponges, bryozoans, tunicates, algae, and detritus. Also known to feed on sea pens.

Vermillion Sea Star6182821598_7b9c9777d0_o

PREDATOR: Seastar Solaster dawsoni.

REMARKS: Moves more rapidly than most sea stars: up to 40 cm (16 inches) minute.

References

Encyclopedia of Life eol.org/pages/598026/details

Walla Walla University http://www.wallawalla.edu/academics/departments/biology/rosario/inverts/Echinodermata/Class%20Asteroidea/Mediaster_aequalis.html

Ron’s flickr  https://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/3051541919/in/set-72157608501343477/

Ron’s WordPress shortlink  http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-1lP

TAXONOMY
Phylum: Echinodermata
Class: Crinoidea (Sea Lilies and Feather Stars)
Order: Comatulida
Family: Antedonidae

Genus/species: Florometra serratissima

GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Tan to reddish tan. Like an upside-down brittle star. The 5 arms often fork near the base to form a total of 10 or more arm branches which are often around 10 cm (4 inches) long. Jointed appendages called pinnules branch from the side of the arms, giving the featherlike appearance. The upper (oral) surface of the arms has an ambulacral groove, and both the mouth and the anus are on the upper side of the central disk. The aboral side of the central disk has clawlike cirri which function somewhat like bird feet to grasp the substrate. Armspread to 25 cm (10 inches).

Common Feather Star8451815809_2bb6752f68_k

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: Alaska to Mexico or farther south to off South America in deep water in a current.  Depth 10-1252 m (32-4100 feet) 

Common Feather StarIMG_5193

 

DIET IN THE WILD: Suspension feeders of plankton  The food transport system of the crinoids extends out on to the arms, or the “feathers,” of the feather star.  It subdivides and continues out into the lateral small projections off the main arm and consists of a mucous-filled ciliated food groove which connects all the way to from the finest arm branch to the mouth on the upper surface of the body. Out on the fine branches, or pinnules, of each arm, the food groove has a row of tube feet on each side of it.  Crinoid tube feet neither work as independent units nor are they used in locomotion. Rather they are used only for feeding, and they work as groups of six, divided into two groups of three tube feet each, on opposite sides of the food groove. These tube feet extend directly up from the animal’s surface into the water.

PREDATORS: Various fishes.

REPRODUCTION: Comatulids are dioecious, each individual being either male or female. Gametes are produced in pinnules at the base of the arms, with external fertilisation. The larvae are planktonic settling on the seabed anchoring themselves with a stalk.
The stalk breaks and the juveniles can move around after metamorphosis.

REMARKS:  Possess the water-vascular system and tube feet that are characteristic of this phylum; however, unlike most other echinoderms, they do not use the tube feet for locomotion. If they need to move more rapidly, perhaps to escape a predator, they release the grip of the cirri and, using a particularly beautiful undulatory motion of the arms, they propel themselves up into the water, swimming for short distances. 

Crinoids, like all other echinoderms, lack even a rudimentary brain, and the nervous system is difficult to see. Nonetheless, they have good sensory capabilities, with millions of small sensory cells located throughout there skin.

LOCATION; California Rocky Reef

References

Encyclopedia of life eol.org/pages/597860/details

Walla Walla University http://www.wallawalla.edu/academics/departments/biology/rosario/inverts/Echinodermata/Class_Crinoidea/Florometra_serratissima.html

Ron’s flickr  http://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/sets/72157608501343477/

Ron’s WordPress shortlink  http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-g7

TAXONOMY
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Class: Anthozoa
Order: Actiniaria
Family: Actiniidae

Genus/species: Urticina lofotensis

 GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS: Column diameter to 10 cm (4 inches), height to 15 cm (6 inches). Column bright scarlet or crimson with white warty spots in longitudinal rows; tentacles slender, elongate, scarlet to crimson.

 White-spotted Rose Anemone3005754146_b9c9c195c5_o

DISTRIBUTION/HABITAT: SE Alaska to San Diego, CA. Found on rocks and walls of surge channels, low intertidal to 15 m (49 feet) on exposed outer coast.

 DIET IN THE WILD: Carnivorous.

REMARKS: Shells or debris rarely found adhered to the tubercles. Juvenile painted greenlings and adults may sleep near its base.

References

 eol eol.org/pages/2549638/details

 Walla Walla Universitywww.wallawalla.edu/academics/departments/biology/rosario/…

 Washing state Universitywww.beachwatchers.wsu.edu/ezidweb/animals/Urticinalofoten…

 Ron’s flickr  https://www.flickr.com/photos/cas_docents/3005754146/in/set-72157625127345346/

Ron’s WordPress shortlink   http://wp.me/p1DZ4b-1ly

 

Location; California Rocky Coast, Giants, Octopus exhibit