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Other echinoderms stick to their Radiata roots. They have a top and bottom, but everything radiates like the arms of a starfish or the spines of a sea urchin. Sea Cucumbers can be thought of as a sea urchin on its side. Food once went up from below and out through the top, now it goes in on the left and out through the right.
Indeed, some Sea Cucumbers are virtually spherical, others are long and look like a worm. The smallest are just 3 millimetres (0.12 in) long, the largest are more like 1 metre (3.3 ft), most are 30 cm (1 ft) at most.
Image via Wikimedia |
It's for this reason that they are so important for the marine ecosystem. You can give them a boost in self confidence and say they are part of "The Clean Up Crew." That'll put a smile on their excuse for a face!
Being an echinoderm they have those tube feet, hundreds of them, in 5 rows. Since they are on their side, the 3 rows of tube feet that are always in contact with ground are well developed, whereas the others on what you would call their back are not so good and sometimes absent entirely.
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And yet, despite everything, or perhaps despite anything I have to say, Sea Cucumbers still guard their lives jealously. It just seems that they can't help but be utterly disgusting in doing so.
Image via Wikimedia |
And it makes me wonder if all that mud actually is anti-ageing, cleansing, rejuvenating and exfoliating after all.
Another thing they can do is called... EVISCERATION.
It's about as violent as it usually is, it's just that the Sea Cucumber can recover from it rather than just quickly die.
Basically, it shoots out a bunch of internal organs through its rear end. This stuff is sticky and toxic to many fish and crabs. Surely a bit traumatising, too? I mean, a load of internal organs fired into your face? People these days like their meat to be amorphous polygons of flesh, not organs and carcasses with lifeless eyes. Imagine if abattoirs worked by scaring cattle into firing out a few internal organs while the actual cow ran off! The Sea Cucumber regenerates its lost innards in a few weeks, so it would even be a renewable resource!
I'm afraid we shall have to take a closer look at that rear end. A good, long, inquisitive stare.
Image via Wikimedia |
Some creatures seem to find this cloaca very intriguing indeed. Crabs and worms might live in it. There are even fish who use it as a place to stay when they are young, protected from predators and picking out bits of food from the passing... processed mud. Ahem. I'm starting to think that this mud must be utterly wonderful stuff, perhaps properly magic! What a life... I hope it's worth it!
Mating doesn't involve the cloaca at all, thankfully. Most Sea Cucumbers release sperm and eggs into the sea through a hole near the mouth tentacles. Most will develop into tiny larvae in a few days. These are free swimming, using cilia to get around. They have so much to look forward to.
Some Sea Cucumbers fertilise their eggs internally and put them in a pouch, almost like a marsupial. Others develop their young within the body and give birth later. The cloaca isn't involved in this process, which is good. If they gave birth through their anus, the fish and crabs living there might eat their young. I can't believe I have found cause to write that sentence.
LOL! whew. at least they saved ONE thing from their purposeful butt!
ReplyDeleteThere's also a swimming species that's very odd, and beautiful:
ReplyDeletehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enypniastes
@TexWisGirl: Yes! A guess we can't fault them for efficiency!
ReplyDelete@Emily: Ah, yes! I shall certainly take a closer look at those in future. Definitely odd. Beautiful? I'll think about that one! Thanks for bringing them up!
To me, the strangest thing of all is that they can live without those organs they just blasted out of their butt until they've regenerated. I could give up a kidney. Maybe a lung. Part of my liver I guess. The rest, I kind of need rather urgently, plus I've grown rather attached to them.
ReplyDeleteHahaha! :)
ReplyDeleteIt's certainly very odd. Perhaps in going from spherical to more wormy they've filled the space with stuff they can actually do quite well without. For a while at least.
Even if my kidneys grew back in a few weeks, I still wouldn't pull them out to throw at bullies! But maybe that's just me.
You know, actually, I think that these sea cucumbers might be onto something. I grew up in a pretty tough town, but I know that if I could've pulled a couple of organs out of my butt and thrown them at bullies in the schoolyard, those bullies never would have bothered me again.
ReplyDeleteIt would probably work on muggers and rapists, too.
Haha! Yeh, that could probably work out quite well. I for one would walk away pretty sharpish even if I wasn't one of the bullies. I guess I would have to get to know you and learn to accept your organ flinging ways.
ReplyDeletethey look like they are made out of cookies lol
ReplyDelete