Donkey dung sea cucumber

Holothuria mexicana

''Holothuria mexicana'', also known as the donkey dung sea cucumber is commonly found in the Caribbean and the Azores. It is a commercially important aspidochirote sea cucumber that can reach a total length of 50 cm.
Donkeydung Sea Cucumber Sep 12, 2017. Dive site Alice in Wonderland.
No wonders about the common name :-) Caribbean Netherlands,Geotagged,Holothuria mexicana,Summer

Appearance

This sea cucumber is transversely wrinkled and reaches 50 cm in total length. It has a top surface that is dull brown or grey with occasional warts. The bottom surface is reddish, orange or pale and is uniformly covered in tube feet. Populations are unimodal and have a 1:1 male to female sex ratio.

Distribution

This species is found throughout the Caribbean and reaches southern Brazil.

It is a shallow or demersal water species most commonly found between 2 m to 10 m depth and up to 20 m depth. It inhabits sandy bottoms with calm waters including seagrass beds, offshore reefs or mangroves.

Habitat

This species is found throughout the Caribbean and reaches southern Brazil.

It is a shallow or demersal water species most commonly found between 2 m to 10 m depth and up to 20 m depth. It inhabits sandy bottoms with calm waters including seagrass beds, offshore reefs or mangroves.

Reproduction

Minimum size at sexual maturity is between 13 cm to 20 cm total length and 150 g gutted weight, though smaller sexually mature individuals have been found.

''Holothuria mexicana'' spawns throughout the year but has peak spawning periods that varies with geography, which may linked to temperature. Spawning occurs from May to July in Panama, August to September in Florida, and September to October in Curaçao.

During spawning, females forcefully expel all their eggs into the water in a single burst from their gonopore . Both males and females sometimes wave their tentacles around during spawning which may aid in fertilization by mixing the sperm and eggs. After fertilization, eggs develop into non-feeding auricular larvae develop in ~64 hours.

Food

''Holothuria mexicana'' feeds on sediments at the bottom of the Atlantic Ocean, specifically consuming organic matter such as algae, tiny aquatic organisms and waste materials. Metals, such as copper, nickel, lead and zinc associated with coastal pollution, can bioaccumulate within ''H. mexicana'' tissues. Therefore, this species has been suggested as a biological indicator for these metals.

References:

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Status: Least concern
EX EW CR EN VU NT LC
Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionEchinodermata
ClassHolothuroidea
OrderHolothuriida
FamilyHolothuriidae
GenusHolothuria
SpeciesH. mexicana