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  2. Starfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Starfish

    Most species in this order have five arms and two rows of tube feet with suckers. There are conspicuous marginal plates on the arms and disc. Some species have paxillae and in some, the main pedicellariae are clamp-like and recessed into the skeletal plates. [110] This group includes the cushion stars, [113] the leather star [114] and the sea ...

  3. Symmetry in biology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symmetry_in_biology

    Additionally, female barn swallows, a species where adults have long tail streamers, prefer to mate with males that have the most symmetrical tails. [26] While symmetry is known to be under selection, the evolutionary history of different types of symmetry in animals is an area of extensive debate.

  4. Asexual reproduction in starfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asexual_reproduction_in...

    In these, there is a transitory hexamerous symmetry in what is a normally a pentamerously symmetrical genus. The immature individuals with 6 arms appear so different in appearance from mature individuals with 5 arms that they were at one time considered to be two genera, Hydrasterias and Sclerasterias. Juveniles with arms measuring between 8 mm ...

  5. Luidia sarsii - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Luidia_sarsii

    Luidia sarsii is a species of starfish.Sand colored with a velvety texture, the species expresses pentamerism or pentaradial symmetry as adults. The five gently tapering arms have conspicuous bands of long white marginal spines in groups of three.

  6. Linckia laevigata - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linckia_laevigata

    The genus Linckia, as is true of other species of starfish, is recognized by scientists as being possessed of remarkable regenerative capabilities, and endowed with powers of defensive autotomy against predators: [citation needed] Although not yet documented, L. laevigata may be able to reproduce asexually, as does the related species Linckia ...

  7. Starfish bodies aren’t bodies at all, study finds - AOL

    www.aol.com/starfish-body-head-crawling-along...

    The unusual animals have unique body plans arranged in five equal sections that differ greatly from the symmetric head-to-tail bodies of bilateral animals, which have left and right sides ...

  8. Crown-of-thorns starfish - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crown-of-thorns_starfish

    A species of pufferfish and two triggerfish have been observed to feed on crown-of-thorns starfish in the Red Sea, and although they may have some effect on the A. planci population, no evidence exists of systematic predation. [37] In the Indo-Pacific waters, white-spotted puffers, and Titan triggerfish have also been found to eat this starfish ...

  9. Asterias amurensis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Asterias_amurensis

    It competes with the starfish Uniophora granifera and Coscinasterias muricata, and Pacific walruses, Odobenus rosmarus ssp. divergens, for bivalve prey. [4] A possible commensal is the bacterium Colwellia asteriadis, a new species published in 2010, which has only been isolated from Asterias amurensis hosts in the sea off Korea. These showed no ...