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The common sand dollar, Echinarachnius parma, can be found in the Northern Hemisphere from the intertidal zone to the depths of the ocean, while the keyhole sand dollars (three species of the genus Mellita) can be found on many a wide range of coasts in and around the Caribbean Sea.
Echinarachnius parma, the common sand dollar, is a species of sand dollar native to the Northern Hemisphere. [1] Subspecies. Echinarachnius parma obesus H.L. Clark, 1914; Echinarachnius parma parma (Lamarck, 1816) Echinarachnius parma sakkalinensis Argamakowa, 1934
Dendraster excentricus, also known as the eccentric sand dollar, sea-cake, biscuit-urchin, western sand dollar, or Pacific sand dollar, is a species of sand dollar in the family Dendrasteridae. It is a flattened, burrowing sea urchin found in the north-eastern Pacific Ocean from Alaska to Baja California .
Keyhole sand dollar refers to five living species of sand dollars in the genus Mellita, plus the extinct †Mellita aclinensis.They are found on the Atlantic coasts of the Americas, ranging across the Caribbean Islands (e.g. Bermuda, Jamaica and Puerto Rico), from the southern United States at the north, to the southeastern coast of Brazil at the south.
Leodia sexiesperforata, commonly known as the six-holed keyhole urchin, [2] is a species of sand dollar, in the echinoderm order Clypeasteroida. It is native to tropical and sub-tropical parts of the western Atlantic Ocean where it buries itself in soft sediment in shallow seas.
Dendraster is a genus of sand dollars of the family Dendrasteridae [2] within the order Clypeasteroida. The extant species in this genus are found in the northeast Pacific Ocean from Alaska to Baja California. [3] The best-known, most common and widespread species is D. excentricus. [3]
These sand dollars were originally named Echinodiscus emarginatus, [9] but have since been transferred to the Encope genus within the Mellitidae family. [6] Encope is thought to be the most diverse genus among sand dollars, containing 7 extant species. [1] Fossils can be dated back to the Pliocene or Pleistocene, up to 5 million years ago. [1]
Heliophora orbicularis, also known as the West African Sand Dollar, is a small sand dollar in to the family Rotulidae, and the only species in the genus Heliophora. It, and other members of Rotulidae have been found in West African marine strata from the Late Miocene onward. Like the related Rotula , it is still extant.
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