Collector urchin

Tripneustes gratilla

The collector urchin is a species of sea urchin. Collector urchins are found at depths of 2 to 30 metres in the waters of the Indo-Pacific, Hawaii, and the Red Sea. They can reach 10 to 15 centimetres in size.
Collector Urchin (Tripneustes gratilla) Jahir, Lembeh. Collector urchin,Geotagged,Indonesia,Spring,Tripneustes gratilla

Appearance

Collector urchins are dark in colour, usually bluish-purple with white spines. The pedicles are also white, with a dark or black base. Individuals found at Green Island had orange-tipped spines. The spines of some specimens are wholly orange, while those of others are only orange-tipped or completely white. This colour disappears when the individual dies or is taken out of the ocean, and is difficult to preserve. Collector urchins reach 10 to 15 centimetres in size. Debris tends to "collect" on these urchins, hence their name.

Unlike some other sea urchins, collector urchins graze continually, day and night. They graze near the substrate, and their diet includes algae, periphyton, and seagrass. Most collector urchins feed on seagrass fronds; this has an ecological impact varying with the season and abundance of the urchins. They feed voraciously between November and January; one study found they consumed up to or in excess of half of seagrass production. On an annual basis, however, the same study concluded that about 24% of seagrass production is consumed by the collector urchin. The seagrass species grazed are mainly ''Thalassodendron ciliatum'' and ''Syringodim isoetifolium'', but other algae may also be consumed.

Collector urchins are prey for puffer fish, octopus and humans.
Tripneustes gratilla W Madagascar, Ifaty Collector urchin,Geotagged,Madagascar,Spring,Tripneustes gratilla

Distribution

Collector urchins are found in the waters of the Indo-Pacific, Hawaii, and the Red Sea. They are distributed from Mozambique to the Red Sea, westward to Hawaii and Clarion Island, eastward to Paumotu, and as far south as Port Jackson. It also occurs at Shark's Bay on the west coast of Australia. Mature collector urchins prefer open sea bottoms with some cover, but the young prefer rocky areas for concealment. Collector urchins inhabit depths of 2 to 30 metres .
Collector Urchin - Tripneustes gratilla This particular Collector Urchin - Tripneustes gratilla has collected some human garbage and even a tunicate to decorate its back, showing its true form, a Collector.  Usually, they carry or collects smaller stuff but this one thinks Big! Anilao,Batangas,Collector urchin,Geotagged,Philippines,Sea Urchin,Spring,Tripneustes gratilla,Urchin

Habitat

Collector urchins are found in the waters of the Indo-Pacific, Hawaii, and the Red Sea. They are distributed from Mozambique to the Red Sea, westward to Hawaii and Clarion Island, eastward to Paumotu, and as far south as Port Jackson. It also occurs at Shark's Bay on the west coast of Australia. Mature collector urchins prefer open sea bottoms with some cover, but the young prefer rocky areas for concealment. Collector urchins inhabit depths of 2 to 30 metres .
Collector Sea Urchin Night dive in House Reef, H. Zabargat.
Hamata, Egypt.      Collector urchin,Egypt,Fall,Geotagged,Tripneustes gratilla

Defense

Hawaii state aquatic biologists, working with divers from the Hawaii Division of Aquatic Resources placed 1,000 native collector urchins on a 500 square metres area of reef in Kaneohe Bay on January 29, 2011. The urchins were released to help control the invasive seaweed genus ''Kappaphycus'', also known as "smothering seaweed," which has overrun local coral. Tripneustes gratilla stays on the reef and is an effective algae grazer.

The urchins were bred at Anuenue Fisheries Research Center from about a million larvae. The larvae produced 25,000 specimens that reached at least 15 millimetres in diameter in about five months. The delicate young had to be kept suspended in the water column for weeks after hatching. The project intends to release 10,000 to 25,000 urchins per month.

Kaneohe Bay is the only barrier reef system in the United States. The alien seaweed was brought to Hawaii for commercial applications such as keeping ice chunks out of ice cream. It escaped when the industry failed.

For years, the state used a marine vacuum pump to remove the algae, at one time removing 10,000 pounds . In 2009, the scientists gathered urchins from other parts of the state and released them at Kaneohe Bay. A year later, they found the urchins had successfully kept the seaweed down.

References:

Some text fragments are auto parsed from Wikipedia.

Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionEchinodermata
ClassEchinoidea
OrderTemnopleuroida
FamilyToxopneustidae
GenusTripneustes
SpeciesT. gratilla