Spiny ophiocoma

Ophiocoma echinata

''Ophiocoma echinata'', the spiny ophiocoma, is a species of brittle star belonging to the family Ophiocomidae. It is the type species of the genus ''Ophiocoma'' and is found in the tropical west Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico.
Spiny Ophiocoma Brittle Star Sep 13, Bari Reef, night dive, Bonaire.
This picture was aimed at the shy brittle star; however, notice those bright eyes inside the coral tube..I think is a crab! ..a shame I ddi not notice it at that moment. And below the coral in the right below part of the picture i think there is a conch sea snail.
Anyway, description on the brittle: One of the larger brittle stars, Ophiocoma echinata can measure up to 32 mm in disk diameter and 150 mm in arm length. The spiny brittle star shares the characteristic body plan of echinoderms, with 5 arms that are well defined from the central disk. The aboral, or top, side of the star is dark brown and sometimes mottled with lighter hues. The arms are usually banded in shades of brown and the oral, or bottom, surface is white in color. The central disk is granular and exhibits a scalloped border. The mouth is located on the oral surface and consists of 5 triangular jaws, each with a central column of teeth. The arms extend out from the muscular jaws and are covered by 4 rows of shields, or calcareous plates. Each arm joint has a vertical row of 4 spines on either side. The length of the spines decease towards the tip of the arm and the spine closest to the mouth is club-shaped. Unlike the asteroids (sea stars), brittle stars have no umbulacral groove and lack the suction apparatus on the podia of the oral surface on the arms.
http://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Ophiocoma_echinata/ Caribbean Netherlands,Geotagged,Ophiocoma echinata,Spiny ophiocoma,Summer

Appearance

''Ophiocoma echinata'' is a large brittle star, with a maximum armspan of 25 cm . The slender, tapering arms are densely clad with short spines and are clearly demarcated from the disc. The colour is dark with pale or cream-coloured markings, but the arms never have any red markings.

Distribution

''Ophiocoma echinata'' is native to the tropical west Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. It is common throughout the Caribbean at depths down to about 30 metres . It occurs in seagrass meadows, on reefs and reef flats, hiding under rocks, in cracks and crevices, under coral heads, and inside sponges.

Behavior

''Ophiocoma echinata'' uses its arms to burrow in the sand and anchor itself in crevices. It holds some of its arms vertically in the passing water current to filter food particles, catching them with the spines and passing them along feeding channels to the mouth. The stomach is entirely within the central disc and is the organ of food storage. Reproduction takes place over a prolonged breeding season with gametes being shed directly into the sea without any synchronisation.

Locomotion involves raising the central disc off the substrate while the tube feet on the arms grip the surface. Despite having no brain and only having a simple, ring-shaped nervous system, ''O. echinata'' is able to adopt a coordinated pattern of locomotion in which one arm leads the way and the others act in synchrony to propel it forward. When the brittle star alters its direction of travel, it does not rotate, but instead a different arm becomes the lead arm and the other arms take on the subordinate role. This shows that a radially symmetrical animal can employ fully coordinated, bilaterally symmetrical locomotion.

When attacked by a predator, ''O. echinata'' sometimes autotomises one or more of its arms. In a back-reef habitat in the Florida Keys, up to 47% of the individuals were found to have missing or damaged arms, and it took about two years for individuals with three missing arms to completely regenerate them. Losing a limb rather than its life is beneficial to the brittle star. Although energy must be diverted to effect the repair and regrowth, the individual should still be able to breed at some time in the future, and the missing arm contributes a renewable resource to the productivity of the reef.

Habitat

''Ophiocoma echinata'' is native to the tropical west Atlantic Ocean, the Caribbean Sea and the Gulf of Mexico. It is common throughout the Caribbean at depths down to about 30 metres . It occurs in seagrass meadows, on reefs and reef flats, hiding under rocks, in cracks and crevices, under coral heads, and inside sponges.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionEchinodermata
ClassOphiuroidea
OrderOphiurida
FamilyOphiocomidae
GenusOphiocoma
SpeciesO. echinata