Starfish (Sea Star)

Starfish

Starfish or Sea Stars are found on any solid structure, from inter-tidal rocks to deep wrecks. They are so common that one forgets just how bizarre they really are. These animals have 5-way body symmetry *, hydraulic tube feet, and ejects their stomach through their mouth to feed. ( Oddly, the planktonic larvae have bilateral symmetry, like higher animals. ) The "eye" is called a madreporite, and is actually the exhaust vent for the hydraulic system. They are capable of regenerating an entire animal from just a fragment. Starfish come in a rainbow of colors from yellow to lavender.

Blood Star

Forbes' Asterias ( above right ) are common in all environments from rivers to deep seas. The skin is covered with tiny spines, giving a rough texture. They grow to an arm length of 5 inches. Northern or Boreal Sea Stars Asterias vulgaris are generally similar to Forbeses, but rather larger ( arms to 8" ) and flabbier. They are more commonly found offshore. Blood Stars Henricia sanguinolenta ( right ) have a much smoother skin. They are found only in deeper waters offshore.

Brittle Stars Ophioderma spp ( below right ) have thin delicate arms that are very flexible and easily broken. They are capable of much

Brittle Star

faster movements than other starfish, crawling, and in some cases even swimming. Brittle stars grow as large as 6 inches, but most are much smaller. They are usually found on muddy bottoms but may turn up anywhere.

Starfish often move so slowly that they don't seem to move at all. Large specimens from deep waters are surprisingly soft and soggy when you bring them up - collect small ones if you want souvenirs.

Starfish Anatomy
Sea Star anatomy
Starfish madreporite
Close-up of skin and madreporite of a Forbes Asterias. The madreporite of the Forbes Asterias is usually orange as shown, while that of the Northern Star is paler.
Starfish
Northern Sea Star on the left, with Forbes on the right.
Northern Sea Stars
Northern Sea Stars
sponges
Feeding exclusively on sponges, the Blood Star Henricia sanguinolenta reaches an arm length of about two inches and is found as far south as Cape Hatteras.
Starfish eating mussel
A small Forbes attacking a mussel in an aquarium

Contrary to the common conception of a drawn-out tug-of-war between the starfish and the mussel, the starfish does not pry open its victim by brute strength. Instead, the starfish inserts its stomach through whatever tiny gap or opening there may be between the shells of the bivalve, which it may widen only slightly by pulling. The digestive process then weakens the bivalve, eventually attacking the adductor muscles that hold the shell closed, and allowing the starfish to open it fully.

Rolling Starfish

Peterson's states that starfish can "float free and drift on strong currents, " but the behavior you see here is not widely documented. These starfish are balled up and rolling in the surge. This appears to be a deliberate mode of transportation, quite a bit faster than they would otherwise travel. Video courtesy of Dan Crowell.

( The annoying tapping sound in the video is not the starfish - it is the boat's depth finder. )

Herb Segars Photography

The Buoyancy Compensator or BC is thought of primarily as a flotation device, and for warm-water divers with not much more than a single tank and reg, this is pretty much all it needs to be. However, for cold-water divers, the BC serves another and equally if not more important function: it is the base around which all the rest of your gear is assembled. For cold-water diving, a BC may be called upon to support multiple tanks, weights, gauges, bags, and myriad accessories - much more equipment than a tropical diver would ever carry. And not all BC designs are equally good at this.

BCs come in essentially two styles: the jacket style, where the entire BC is sewn into something like an inflatable vest, and the "tech" style, which consists of a web harness to which a back-mounted air bladder is attached for floatation. One thing that most beginners do not realize is that if you planned your dive and weighting correctly, you should be carrying very little air in your BC during your dive; especially true if you use a drysuit. Therefore, many of the manufacturer's big selling points of "interconnected three-dimensional air cells" and the like are more specious marketing hype than useful features, and the old inverted-U back bladder ( clearly descended from an automobile inner tube ) will work just as well as the much more complex and expensive designs, and sometimes better.

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