Ocean
Watch
Friday, December 6, 2002
Starfish a great topic
for students
I get a lot of e-mail about starfish. Often, the
letters come from students who find my Web site and write something like
this: "I am doing a project on starfish. Could you send me information on
this topic? Thanks." Internet searches are fine, I advise these kids, but
not without some textbook reading first.
While reviewing my starfish letters last week, I
noticed that each writer used the term starfish when referring to these
multiarmed creatures. This is noteworthy because not one of my textbooks
or marine guides calls them starfish. From the oldest book, published in
1982, to the newest, published in 1998, each author refers to these
creatures as sea stars.
For years now, biologists have been encouraging people
to use the term "sea star" for starfish. The reasoning goes that these
creatures aren't fish and, therefore, shouldn't have that word in their
name. But when I use the term "sea star," most people say, "Do you mean
starfish?"
The waters of animal names are muddy enough. For me, a
starfish is a starfish.
In my stack of starfish letters, I also found a good
question. For a research project, a student, Laura, chose starfish
regeneration. Laura wrote that she knows a starfish can grow into a new
individual from one torn-off or castoff arm, but she read that the new
arms never grow as big as the original. She asks, "Would the starfish's
ability to move and eat be affected by this?"
First, torn-off and castoff arms are two different
things.
A starfish body consists of a central disk, the
animal's control center, and five to 50 radiating arms. If part of a
starfish's disk is injured or any of its arms are bitten or broken off,
the creature can regenerate the lost parts.
Besides regrowing damaged parts, some kinds of starfish
also routinely create entire new individuals by casting off an arm. These
starfish, common in Hawaii, are called linckia (LINK-ee-a).
Linckia are notable because their castoff arms have no
portion of the central disk attached, yet each arm still is able to grow
into a complete starfish. Other starfish types need at least part of the
disk attached to a castoff arm to make a new individual.
After dropping an arm, the linckia grows a new one in
the empty space. The dropped arm grows a new central disk with a cluster
of tiny arms radiating from it. At this stage these animals look like
comets, and that's what they're called.
Because comets take a long time to achieve normal
proportions, it seems that the new arms never grow as long as the
original. But it's not so. We seldom see linckia with equal-length arms
because these creatures are nearly always in some stage of regeneration.
New starfish, however, eventually become symmetrical.
During a starfish's period of lopsidedness, it walks
slower and eats less than full-grown adults. Still, linckia do just fine.
They are the most common starfish in Hawaiian waters.
We host two species here. One is the green linckia,
some of which are green and some of which are blue or brown. The other
species is the spotted linckia, a gray or pink starfish that may or may
not have red spots.
Whatever we call them, starfish are excellent choices
for student projects and papers at every level. These seemingly simple
symbols of the sea aren't simple at all. |