Image: Patrick Randall |
Starfish to the rescue!
Image: James Lynott |
There are three species, all found in Indo-Pacific waters and all belonging to a genus called Culcita. The word comes from the Latin for 'mattress', so... maybe mermaids are really small? Or perhaps there are merfairies!
Image: Ed Bierman |
They look ridiculous...
Image: John Turnbull |
Image: Patrick Randall |
Like they're in constant need of a large, comfortable chair to sit in. If any starfish can get tired out from crawling at a snail's pace, this is it. And, coincidentally, a comfortable chair is the perfect place for a nice, puffy cushion!
Image: Ed Bierman |
And that thick, almost hemispherical body with almost no arms to speak of. What's a starfish without a star-shape? If only 'Blobfish' wasn't already taken.
Image: Shari That's the tip of an arm! You can see the groove for the tube feet |
And yet, and yet, and yet. Despite it all, they remain surprisingly flexible as they crawl about in search of detritus, corals or sponges to munch on.
Video: jaiman024
They look inflated fit to burst but they can still change shape to a degree. So, they might look like a near spherical bulge, but they can also look much more like a chubby pentagon and sometimes you can even recognise starfish arms begging to be noticed.
Interestingly, they didn't always look this way.
Image: WoRMS Editorial Board Youngsters |
As they grow into adulthood, Cushion Stars lose the svelte figure of their youth and begin to pile on the pounds. Maybe I should think about tackling that chocolate habit sooner rather than later?
funky and aptly named!
ReplyDeleteI wonder if any marine biologist has actually tried to sit on it...sadly knowing what starfish are made of it would probably be hard.
ReplyDelete@TexWisGirl: Isn't it just!
ReplyDelete@Esther: Hahah! Yeah, I doubt it's as comfortable as it looks!