Catalog Number:
400217 -DSP
Specimen Count:
1
Precise Locality:

3 Miles W of Egmont Key

Locality:
Atlantic Ocean Region
Collecting Date:
2 Nov 1967
Collecting Locality:
North America, North Atlantic Ocean, Gulf of Mexico, United States, Florida, Florida Keys
Special Instructions:
Only available digitally
Upper Level Taxonomy:
Animalia, Echinodermata, Echinozoa, Echinoidea, Clypeasteroida, Scutellina, Mellitidae
Location:
Collection Wall

Echinoderms stand out as the only organisms on Earth with five arms or other elements spaced evenly around a central point. This pentaradial symmetry (penta = “five;” radial = “around a central point") is obvious in some echinoderms, such as sea stars or brittle stars that have five arms. It’s more subtle on others, such as the five rows of tube feet on a sea cucumber or five grooves on a sand dollar. This unusual symmetry of adult echinoderms is not found in juveniles. In fact, echinoderm larvae have two-sided (bilateral) symmetry like humans, and must undergo a metamorphosis to become pentaradial adults. Body plans of animals during their development often say something about their ancestry. The bilateral bodies of developing echinoderms are a reminder that, aside from other back-boned animals (vertebrates), echinoderms may be our closest relatives. Unlike most living echinoderms, many fossil echinoderms did not have pentaradial symmetry.