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Starfish

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Starfish
Temporal range: Ordovician–Recent
Clockwise from top left: Linckia laevigata, Echinaster serpentarius, Protoreaster nodosus, and Hymnaster pellucidus. Not to scale.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Subphylum: Asterozoa
Class: Asteroidea
Blainville, 1830
Child taxa and orders

Calliasterellidae
Trichasteropsida[2]

Diversity
1,900+ species

Starfish or sea stars are a class of marine invertebrates generally shaped like a star polygon. (In common usage, these names are also often applied to ophiuroids, which are correctly referred to as brittle stars or basket stars.) Starfish are also known as asteroids because they form the taxonomic class Asteroidea (/ˌæstəˈrɔɪdiə/). About 1,900 species of starfish live on the seabed, and are found in all the world's oceans, from warm, tropical zones to frigid, polar regions. They can occur from the intertidal zone down to abyssal depths, at 6,000 m (20,000 ft) below the surface.

Starfish are echinoderms and typically have a central disc and usually five arms, though some species have a larger number of arms. The aboral or upper surface may be smooth, granular or spiny, and is covered with overlapping plates. Many species are brightly coloured in various shades of red or orange, while others are blue, grey or brown. Starfish have tube feet operated by a hydraulic system and a mouth at the centre of the oral or lower surface. They are opportunistic feeders and are mostly predators on benthic invertebrates. Several species have specialized feeding behaviours including eversion of their stomachs and suspension feeding. They have complex life cycles and can reproduce both sexually and asexually. Most can regenerate damaged parts or lost arms and they can shed arms as a means of defense.

The Asteroidea occupy several significant ecological roles. Some, such as the ochre sea star (Pisaster ochraceus) and the reef sea star (Stichaster australis), serve as keystone species, with an outsize impact on their environment. The tropical crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) is a voracious predator of coral throughout the Indo-Pacific region, and the Northern Pacific seastar is on a list of the Worst Invasive Alien Species.

The fossil record for starfish is ancient, dating back to the Ordovician period around 450 million years ago, but it is rather sparse, as starfish tend to disintegrate after death. Only the ossicles and spines of the animal are likely to be preserved, making remains hard to locate. With their appealing symmetrical shape, starfish have played a part in literature and legend. They are sometimes collected as curios, used in design or as logos, and in some cultures they are eaten.

Anatomy

[edit]

Most starfish have five arms that radiate from a central disc, but the number varies with the group. Some species have six or seven arms and others have 10–15 arms.[3] In Antarctic Labidiaster annulatus, the number of arms can exceed fifty.[4] Evidence from gene expression finds that the starfish body corresponds to a head externally (with lips attached to the tube feet) and a torso internally.[5] Starfish possess two vascular systems, one for transport of water to support locomotion and other functions, and another for circulation of blood.

Body wall

[edit]

The body wall layers include a thin cuticle, an epidermis consisting of a single layer of cells, a thick dermis formed of connective tissue, a thin coelomic myoepithelial layer for the muscles, and a peritoneum. The dermis contains an endoskeleton of calcium carbonate components known as ossicles. These are honeycomb-like structures composed of calcite microcrystals arranged in a lattice.[6] They vary in form, from flat plates to granules to spines, and cover the aboral surface.[7] Some are specialised structures such as the madreporite (the entrance to the water vascular system), pedicellariae, and paxillae. Paxillae are umbrella-like structures found on starfish that live buried in substrate. The edges of adjacent paxillae meet to form a false cuticle with a water cavity beneath in which the madreporite and delicate gill structures are protected. The ossicles are located under the epidermal layer, even those emerging externally.[6]

Several groups of starfish, including Valvatida and Forcipulatida, possess pedicellariae.[8] These are scissor-like ossicles at the tip of the spine which displace organisms from resting on the starfish's surface.[9][10] Some species like Labidiaster annulatus and Novodinia antillensis use their pedicellariae to catch prey.[11] There may also be papulae, thin-walled protrusions of the body cavity that reach through the body wall into the surrounding water. These serve a respiratory function.[12] The structures are supported by collagen fibres set at right angles to each other and arranged in a three-dimensional web with the ossicles and papulae in the interstices. This arrangement enables both easy flexion of the arms and the rapid onset of stiffness and rigidity required for some actions performed under stress.[13]

Water vascular system

[edit]

The water vascular system of the starfish is a hydraulic system made up of a network of fluid-filled canals and is concerned with locomotion, adhesion, food manipulation and gas exchange. Water enters the system through the madreporite, a porous, often conspicuous, sieve-like ossicle on the aboral surface. It is linked through a calcareous-lined canal called the stone canal, to a ring canal around the mouth opening. A set of radial canals branch off from the ring canal; one radial canal runs along the ambulacral groove in each arm. There are short lateral canals branching off alternately to either side of the radial canal, each ending in an ampulla. These bulb-shaped organs are joined to tube feet (podia) on the exterior of the animal by short linking canals that pass through ossicles in the ambulacral groove. There are usually two rows of tube feet but in some species, the lateral canals are alternately long and short and there appear to be four rows. The interior of the whole canal system is lined with cilia.[14]

Water is pushed into the tube face when longitudinal muscles in the ampullae contract, and shut the valves in the lateral canals. This causes the tube feet to stretch and touch the substrate.[14] Although the tube feet resemble suction cups in appearance, the gripping action is a function of adhesive chemicals rather than suction.[15] Other chemicals and relaxation of the ampullae allow for release from the substrate. The tube feet latch on to surfaces and move in a wave, with one arm section attaching to the surface as another releases.[16][17] To expose the sensory tube feet and the eyespot to external stimuli, some starfish turn up the tips of their arms while moving.[18]

Having descended from bilateral organisms, starfish may move in a bilateral fashion, particularly when hunting or threatened. When crawling, certain arms act as the leading arms, while others trail behind. When a starfish finds itself upside down, two adjacent arms and an opposite arm press against the ground to lift up the two remaining arms; the opposite arm leaves the ground as the starfish turns over and recovers its normal stance.[19]

Apart from their function in locomotion, the tube feet act as accessory gills. The water vascular system serves to transport oxygen from, and carbon dioxide to, the tube feet and nutrients from the gut to the muscles involved in locomotion. Fluid movement is bidirectional and initiated by cilia.[14]

Digestive system and excretion

[edit]
Diagram of starfish anatomy
Aboral view of partially dissected starfish:
  1. Pyloric stomach
  2. Intestine and anus
  3. Rectal sac
  4. Stone canal
  5. Madreporite
  6. Pyloric caecum
  7. Digestive glands
  8. Cardiac stomach
  9. Gonad
  10. Radial canal
  11. Ambulacral ridge

The gut of a starfish fills most of the central disc and extends into the arms. The mouth occupies the centre of the oral surface, where it is surrounded by a tough peristomial membrane and closed with a sphincter. A short oesophagus connects the mouth to a stomach, which consists of an eversible cardial portion and a smaller pyloric portion. The cardial stomach is glandular and pouched, and is supported by ligaments attached to ossicles in the arms so it can be pulled back into position after it has been everted. The pyloric stomach has two extensions into each arm: the pyloric caeca. These are long, hollow tubes lined by a series of glands which secrete digestive enzymes and absorb nutrients from the food. A short intestine and rectum run from the pyloric stomach to the anus at the apex of the aboral surface of the disc.[20]

Primitive starfish, such as Astropecten and Luidia, swallow their prey whole, and start to digest it in their cardial stomachs, spitting out hard material like shells. The semi-digested fluid flows into the caeca for more digestion as well as absorption.[20] In more advanced species of starfish, the cardial stomach can be everted from the organism's body to engulf and digest food, which is passed to the pyloric stomach.[21][16] The retraction and contraction of the cardial stomach is activated by a neuropeptide known as NGFFYamide.[22]

The main nitrogenous waste product is ammonia, which is removed via diffusion through the tube feet, papulae and other thin-walled areas. Other waste material include urates. The body fluid contains phagocytic cells called coelomocytes, which are also found within the hemal and water vascular systems. These cells engulf waste material, and eventually migrate to the tips of the papulae, where a portion of body wall is nipped off and ejected into the surrounding water.[23]

Starfish keep their body fluids at the same salt concentration as the surrounding water, the lack of an osmoregulation system probably explains why starfish are not found in fresh water and rarely in estuarine environments.[23]

Sensory and nervous systems

[edit]

Although starfish do not have many well-defined sense organs, they do perceive touch, light, temperature, orientation and the status of the water around them. The tube feet, spines and pedicellariae are sensitive to touch. The tube feet, especially those at the tips of the rays, are also sensitive to chemicals, enabling the starfish to detect odour sources such as food.[21] There are eyespots at the ends of the arms, each one made of 80–200 simple ocelli composed of pigmented epithelial cells. Individual photoreceptor cells are present in other parts of their bodies and respond to light. Whether they advance or retreat depends on the species.[24]

While a starfish lacks a centralized brain, it has a complex nervous system with a nerve ring around the mouth and a radial nerve running along the ambulacral region of each arm parallel to the radial canal. The peripheral nerve system consists of two nerve nets: one in the epidermis and the other in the lining of the coelomic cavity, which are the sensory and motor systems respectively. Neurons passing through the dermis join the two. Both the ring and radial nerves function in movement and sensory. The sensory component is supplied with information from the sensory organs while the motor nerves control the tube feet and musculature. If one arm detects something attractive, it becomes dominant and temporarily over-rides the other arms to initiate movement towards it.[24]

Circulatory and gas exchange system

[edit]

The body cavity contains the circulatory or haemal system. The vessels form three rings: one around the mouth (the hyponeural haemal ring), another around the digestive system (the gastric ring), and the third near the aboral surface (the genital ring). The heart beats about six times a minute and is at the apex of a vertical channel (the axial vessel) that connects the three rings. Blood does not contain a pigment such as heme, but is probably used to transport nutrients around the body.[23] Gas exchange mainly takes place through gills known as papulae, which are thin-walled bulges along the aboral surface of the arms. Oxygen is transferred from these to the coelomic fluid, which moves gas around the body.[14]

Secondary metabolites

[edit]

Starfish produce a large number of secondary metabolites in the form of lipids, including steroidal derivatives of cholesterol, and fatty acid amides of sphingosine. The steroids are mostly saponins, known as asterosaponins, and their sulphated derivatives. They vary across species and are typically formed from up to six sugar molecules (usually glucose and galactose) connected by up to three glycosidic chains. Long-chain fatty acid amides of sphingosine occur frequently, with some having known biological activity. Starfish also contain various ceramides and a small number of alkaloids. These chemicals in the starfish may function in defence and communication. Some are feeding deterrents used by the starfish to discourage predation. Others are antifoulants and supplement the pedicellariae to prevent other organisms from settling on the starfish's aboral surface. Some are alarm pheromones and escape-eliciting chemicals, the release of which trigger responses in starfish of the same species, but often stimulate flight in potential prey.[25] Research into the efficacy of these compounds for possible pharmacological or industrial use occurs worldwide.[26]

Life cycle

[edit]

Sexual reproduction

[edit]

Most species of starfish are gonochorous, there being separate male and female individuals.[27] Some species are simultaneous hermaphrodites, producing eggs and sperm at the same time, and in a few of these the same gonad, called an ovotestis, produces both eggs and sperm.[28] Other starfish are sequential hermaphrodites. Protandrous individuals of species like Asterina gibbosa start life as males before changing sex into females as they grow older.[29] In some species such as Nepanthia belcheri, a large female can split in half and the resulting offspring are males. When these grow large enough they change back into females.[30]

Each starfish arm contains two gonads that release gametes through openings called gonoducts, located on the central disc between the arms. Fertilization is generally external[27] but in a few species, internal fertilization takes place.[28] In most species, the buoyant eggs and sperm are simply released into the water (free spawning) and the resulting embryos and larvae live as part of the plankton.[27] In others, the eggs may be stuck to the undersides of rocks.[29] In certain species of starfish, the females brood their eggs – either by simply enveloping them or by holding them in specialised structures in different parts of the body, externally or internally.[31][32][27] Those starfish that brood their eggs by "sitting" on them usually assume a humped posture with their discs raised off the substrate.[33][29] Pteraster militaris broods a few of its young and disperses the remaining eggs, that are too numerous to fit into its pouch.[31] In these brooding species, the eggs are relatively large, and supplied with yolk, and they generally develop directly into miniature starfish without an intervening larval stage,[28] called "lecithotrophic" .[34] In Parvulastra parvivipara, an intragonadal brooder, the young starfish obtain nutrients by eating other eggs and embryos in the brood pouch.[35] Brooding occurs in species that live in colder waters.[27] and in smaller species that produce just a few eggs.[36][37]

The timing of spawning may be influenced by lighting conditions, water temperature, food availability, and other factors. Individuals may gather together to release their gametes as once, using pheromones to attract each other.[38][37] In some species, a male and female may come together and form a pair.[39][40] They engage in pseudocopulation which involves the male crawling on the female and fertilising her gametes as she releases them.[41][37]

Larval development

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Starfish larvae
Three kinds of bilaterally symmetric starfish larvae (from left to right) scaphularia larva, bipinnaria larva, brachiolaria larva, all of Asterias sp. Painted by Ernst Haeckel

Starfish embryos typically hatch as blastulas. Invaginations take place, the first forming the anus is created from the blastopore, while a second, taking place in the ectodermic layer, creates the mouth. The archenteron stretches towards the mouth and connects with it, forming the gut.[42] A band of cilia develops on the exterior. This enlarges and extends around the surface and eventually onto two developing arm-like outgrowths. At this stage the larva is known as a bipinnaria. The cilia are used for locomotion and feeding, their rhythmic beat wafting phytoplankton towards the mouth.[8]

The next stage in development is a brachiolaria larva, and involves the growth of three short ventral-anterior arms with adhesive tips surrounding a sucker. Both bipinnaria and brachiolaria larvae are bilaterally symmetrical. When fully developed, the brachiolaria settles on the seabed and attaches itself with a short stalk made from its ventral arms and sucker. Metamorphosis now takes place with a radical rearrangement of tissues. The larvae develops an oral surface on the left and an aboral surface on the right. While the gut remains, the mouth and anus move to new positions. Some of the body cavities disappear while others become the water vascular system and the visceral coelom. The starfish is now pentaradially symmetrical. It casts off its stalk and becomes a free-living juvenile starfish up to 1 mm (0.04 in) in diameter.[8]

Asexual reproduction

[edit]
Regeneration from an arm
"Comet" of Linckia guildingi, showing starfish body regrowing from a single arm

Some species of starfish can reproduce asexually as adults either by fission of their central discs or by autotomy (self-amputation) of one or more of their arms.[43][44] Single arms that regenerate a whole individual are called comet forms.[45] The larvae of several species of starfish can reproduce asexually before they reach maturity.[46] They do this by autotomising some parts of their bodies or by budding.[47] Larva increase asexual reproduction when they sense that food is plentiful.[48] Though this costs it time and energy and delays maturity, it allows a single larva to give rise to multiple adults when the conditions are appropriate.[47]

Regeneration

[edit]
Arms being regenerated
Sunflower seastar regenerating missing arms

Some species of starfish have the ability to regenerate lost arms and can regrow an entire new limb given time.[49] A few can regrow a complete new disc from a single arm, while others need at least part of the central disc to be attached to the detached part.[23] Regrowth can take several months, and starfish are vulnerable to infections during the early stages after the loss of an arm.[49] Other than fragmentation carried out for the purpose of reproduction, the division of the body may happen as a defense mechanism.[23] The loss of body parts is achieved by the rapid softening of a special type of connective tissue in response to nervous signals. This type of tissue is called catch connective tissue and is found in most echinoderms.[50] An autotomy-promoting factor has been identified which, when injected into another starfish, causes rapid shedding of arms.[51]

Lifespan

[edit]

The lifespan of a starfish varies considerably among species. For example, Leptasterias hexactis reaches sexual maturity at 20 g (0.7 oz) in two years and lives for about ten years. Pisaster ochraceus matures at 70–90 g (2.5–3.2 oz) in five years and has a maximum recorded lifespan of 34 years.[8]

Ecology

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Distribution and habitat

[edit]

Starfish live in marine waters around the world including both tropical and polar waters.[6][52][53] They are mainly benthic animals, living in sandy, muddy and rocky substrates.[6][16] They range from shallow, intertidal waters[52] to the deep-sea floor down to at least 6,000 m (20,000 ft).[54] Starfish are most common along the coast.[6]

Diet

[edit]
A starfish with its stomach turned outside its mouth to feed on coral
A Circeaster pullus starfish everting its stomach to feed on coral

Most species are generalist predators, eating microalgae, sponges, bivalves, snails and other small animals.[21][55] The crown-of-thorns starfish consumes coral polyps,[56] while other species are detritivores, feeding on decomposing organic material and faecal matter.[55][52] A few are suspension feeders, gathering in phytoplankton; Henricia and Echinaster often feed with sponges, taking advantage of the water current they produce. Various species can absorb organic nutrients from the surrounding water, and this may form a significant portion of their diet.[57]

The processes of feeding and capture may be aided by special parts; Pisaster brevispinus, the short-spined pisaster from the West Coast of America, can use a set of specialized tube feet to dig itself deep into the soft substrate to extract prey (usually clams).[58] Grasping the shellfish, the starfish slowly pries open the prey's shell, overcoming the clam's adductor muscle, and inserts its everted stomach into the crack to digest the soft tissues. The gap between the clam's valves need only be a fraction of a millimetre wide for the stomach to gain entry.[16]

Ecological impact

[edit]
Starfish on a wood pier

Starfish are keystone species in their respective marine communities. Their relatively large sizes, diverse diets, and ability to adapt to different environments makes them ecologically important.[59] The term "keystone species" was in fact first used by Robert Paine in 1966 to describe a starfish, Pisaster ochraceus.[60] When studying the low intertidal coasts of Washington state, Paine found that predation by P. ochraceus was a major factor in the diversity of species. Experimental removals of this top predator from a stretch of shoreline resulted in lower species diversity and the eventual domination of Mytilus mussels, which were able to outcompete other organisms for space and resources.[61] Similar results were found in a 1971 study of Stichaster australis on the intertidal coast of the South Island of New Zealand. S. australis was found to have removed most of a batch of transplanted mussels within two or three months of their placement, while in an area from which S. australis had been removed, the mussels increased in number dramatically, overwhelming the area and threatening biodiversity.[62]

Starfish devouring mussel
Pisaster ochraceus consuming a mussel in central California

The feeding activity of the omnivorous starfish Oreaster reticulatus on sandy and seagrass bottoms near the Virgin Islands effects the composition of communities of microorganisms. These starfish engulf piles of sediment removing the surface films and algae adhering to the particles. Organisms that dislike this disturbance are replaced by others better able to rapidly recolonise "clean" sediment. In addition, foraging by these starfish creates diverse patches of organic matter, which may attract larger organisms such as fish, crabs and sea urchins that feed on the sediment.[63][64][65]

Starfish sometimes have negative effects on ecosystems. Outbreaks of crown-of-thorns starfish have caused damage to coral reefs in Northeast Australia and French Polynesia.[56][66] A study in Polynesia found that coral cover declined drastically with the arrival of migratory starfish in 2006, dropping over 40% to under 5% in four years. This in turn had a cascade effect on both sessile bottom-dwelling animals and reef fish.[56] Asterias amurensis is a rare example of an invasive echinoderm . Its larvae likely arrived in Tasmania from central Japan via water discharged from ships in the 1980s. The species has since grown in numbers to the point where they threaten important bivalve fisheries in Australia. As such, they are considered pests,[67] and are on the Invasive Species Specialist Group's list of the world's 100 worst invasive species.[68] Some species that prey on bivalve molluscs can transmit paralytic shellfish poisoning.[69]

Threats

[edit]
Gull feeding on starfish
American herring gull feeding on a starfish

Starfish may be preyed on by conspecifics, sea anemones,[70] other starfish species, tritons, crabs, fish, gulls, and sea otters.[36][67][71][65] Their first lines of defence are the saponins present in their body walls, which have unpleasant flavours.[72] Some starfish such as Astropecten polyacanthus also include powerful toxins such as tetrodotoxin,[73] while the slime star can ooze out large quantities of repellent mucus.[74] The crown-of-thorns starfish possesses sharp spines, toxins and bright warning colours.[75]

Warning coloration in the crown-of-thorns starfish

Several species sometimes suffer from a wasting condition caused by Vibrio bacteria.[71] A more widespread sea star wasting disease sporadically causes mass mortalities.[76] The results of a 2025 study of starfish off the coast of central British Columbia suggest that those living in the fjords can better survive outbreaks of the disease due to the lower temperatures and higher salinity of their environment.[77][78]

The protozoan Orchitophrya stellarum is known to infect and damage the gonads of starfish.[71] Starfish are vulnerable to high temperatures. Experiments have shown that the feeding and growth rates of P. ochraceus reduce greatly when their body temperatures rise above 23 °C (73 °F) and that they die when their temperature rises to 30 °C (86 °F).[79][80][71] This species has a unique ability to absorb seawater to keep itself cool when it is exposed to sunlight by a receding tide.[81] It also appears to rely on its arms to absorb heat, so as to protect the central disc and vital organs.[82]

Starfish and other echinoderms can be vulnerable to marine pollution.[83] The common starfish is considered to be a bioindicator species for marine ecosystems.[84] A 2009 study found that P. ochraceus is unlikely to be affected by ocean acidification as severely as other marine animals with calcareous skeletons. In other groups, structures made of calcium carbonate are vulnerable to dissolution when the pH is lowered. Researchers found that when P. ochraceus were exposed to 21 °C (70 °F) and 770 ppm carbon dioxide (beyond rises expected in the next century), they were relatively unaffected. Their survival is likely due to the nodular nature of their skeletons, which are able to compensate for a shortage of carbonate by growing more fleshy tissue.[85]

Evolution

[edit]

Fossil record

[edit]
Starfish fossil
Starfish fossil, Riedaster reicheli, from the Plattenkalk Upper Jurassic limestone, Solnhofen

The earliest fossil echinoderms date to the Cambrian, with the first asterozoans (a group that includes starfish and brittle stars) being the Somasteroidea, which exhibit traits of both groups.[86] Starfish are infrequently found as fossils, possibly because their hard skeletal components separate as the animal decays. Despite this, there are a few places where accumulations of complete skeletal structures occur, fossilized in place in Lagerstätten – so-called "starfish beds".[87]

By the late Paleozoic, the crinoids and blastoids were the predominant echinoderms, fragments of which are almost the only fossil found in some limestones. In the two major extinction events that occurred during the late Devonian and late Permian, the blastoids were wiped out and only a few species of crinoids survived.[86] Many starfish species also became extinct in these events, but afterwards the surviving few species quickly diversified rapidly over sixty million years between the beginning and middle of the Middle Jurassic.[88][89] A 2012 study found that speciation in starfish can occur rapidly. During the last 6,000 years, divergence in the larval development of Cryptasterina hystera and Cryptasterina pentagona has taken place, the former adopting internal fertilization and brooding and the latter remaining a broadcast spawner.[90]

Diversity

[edit]

The scientific name Asteroidea was given to starfish by the French zoologist de Blainville in 1830.[91] It is derived from the Greek aster, ἀστήρ (a star) and the Greek eidos, εἶδος (form, likeness, appearance).[92] Starfish are included in the subphylum Asterozoa along with brittle and basket stars (order Ophiuroidea), the characteristics of which include a star-shaped body as adults, with multiple arms surrounding central disc. The arms of asteroids are skeletally connected to the disc by ossicles in the body wall[88] while ophiuroids have clearly demarcated arms.[93]

The starfish are a large and diverse class with over 1,900 living species. There are seven extant orders: Brisingida, Forcipulatida, Notomyotida, Paxillosida, Spinulosida, Valvatida and Velatida.[2][1] Living asteroids, the Neoasteroidea, are distinct from their forerunners in the Paleozoic. Their classification has changed little but there is debate in regards to Paxillosida. The deep-water sea daisies, though clearly Asteroidea and currently included in Velatida, do not fit easily in any accepted lineage. Phylogenetic data suggests that they may be a sister group, the Concentricycloidea, to the Neoasteroidea, or that the Velatida themselves may be a sister group.[89]

18-arm starfish
A large 18-armed member of Brisingida

Living groups

[edit]
Brisingida (2 families, 17 genera, 111 species)[94]
Species in this order have a small, rigid disc and 6–20 long, thin arms, which they use for suspension feeding. They have one series of marginal plates, disc plates merged in a ring, fewer numbers of aboral plates, crossed pedicellariae, and several series of long spines on the arms. They mostly live in deep-sea habitats, although a few live in shallow waters in the Antarctic.[95][96] In some species, the tube feet have rounded tips and lack suckers.[97]
Common starfish
Common starfish, a member of Forcipulatida
Forcipulatida (6 families, 63 genera, 269 species)[98]
Species in this order have distinctive pedicellariae, consisting of a short stalk with forceps-like tips. and tube feet with flat-tipped suckers usually arranged in four rows.[97][8][88] The order includes well-known species from temperate and cold-water regions, ranging from intertidal to abyssal zones.[99]
Notomyotida (1 family, 8 genera, 75 species)[100]
These starfish are deep-sea dwelling and have particularly flexible arms with distinctive lines of musculature along the sides of the dorsal region.[1] In some species, the tube feet lack suckers.[97]
Magnificent star
Magnificent star, a member of Paxillosida
Paxillosida (7 families, 48 genera, 372 species)[101]
This is a primitive order whose members do not extrude their stomach[20] when feeding and both anus and tube feet suckers are absent.[102] Papulae are present on their aboral surface, and they possess marginal plates and paxillae. They mostly inhabit soft substrates.[8] There is no brachiolaria stage in their larval development.[102] The comb starfish (Astropecten polyacanthus) is a member of this order.[103]
Red-knobbed starfish
Red-knobbed starfish, a member of Valvatida
Spinulosida (1 family, 8 genera, 121 species)[104]
Most species in this order lack pedicellariae; all have a delicate skeletal arrangement with small or no marginal plates on the disc or arms. They have numerous groups of short spines on the aboral surface.[105][106]
Valvatida (16 families, 172 genera, 695 species)[107]
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.[106]
Velatida (4 families, 16 genera, 138 species)[108]
This order of starfish consists mostly of deep-sea and other cold-water starfish often with a global distribution. The shape is pentagonal or star-shaped with five to fifteen arms. The skeleton is underdeveloped.[109]

Extinct groups

[edit]

Extinct groups within the Asteroidea include:[2]

Phylogeny

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External

[edit]

Starfish are deuterostome animals, like the chordates. A 2014 analysis of 219 genes from all classes of echinoderms gives the following phylogenetic tree.[112] The times at which the clades diverged are shown under the labels in millions of years ago (mya).

Bilateria

Internal

[edit]

The phylogeny of the Asteroidea has been difficult to resolve, with visible (morphological) features proving inadequate, and the question of whether traditional taxa are clades apply.[2] The phylogeny proposed by Gale in 1987 is:[2][113]

† Palaeozoic Asteroids

Paxillosida

Forcipulatida, including Brisingida

Valvatida, including Velatida, Spinulosida (not a clade)[2]

The phylogeny proposed by Blake in 1987 is:[2][114]

† Palaeozoic Asteroids

† Calliasterellidae

† Compasteridae

† Trichasteropsida

Brisingida

Forcipulatida

Spinulosida

Velatida

Paxillosida

Notomyotida

Valvatida

Later work making use of molecular evidence, with or without the use of morphological evidence, had by 2000 failed to resolve the argument.[2] In 2011, on further molecular evidence, Janies and colleagues noted that the phylogeny of the echinoderms "has proven difficult", and that "the overall phylogeny of extant echinoderms remains sensitive to the choice of analytical methods". They presented a phylogenetic tree for the living Asteroidea only; using the traditional names of starfish orders where possible, and indicating "part of" otherwise, the phylogeny is shown below. The Solasteridae are split from the Velatida, and the old Spinulosida is broken up.[115]

Velatida except for Solasteridae

Brisingida with part of Velatida, e.g. Caymanostella and part of Forcipulatida, e.g. Stichaster

Forcipulatida

part of Spinulosida, e.g. Echinaster, part of Valvatida, e.g. Archaster

Paxillosida

Odontasteridae, which was a part of Valvatida

Solasteridae and part of Spinulosida, e.g. Stegnaster and part of Valvatida, e.g. Asterina

Notomyotida (not analysed)

Human relations

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In research

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A calcified starfish from Los Roques Archipelago

Starfish have been used in reproductive and developmental studies. Female starfish produce large numbers of oocytes that are easily isolated; these can be stored in a pre-meiosis phase and stimulated to complete division by the use of 1-methyladenine.[116] Starfish oocytes are well suited for this research as they are easy to handle, can be maintained in sea water at room temperature, are transparent, and develop quickly.[117] Asterina pectinifera, used as a model organism for this purpose, is resilient and easy to breed and maintain in the laboratory.[118]

Another area of research is the ability of starfish to regenerate lost body parts. The stem cells of adult humans are incapable of much differentiation and understanding the regrowth, repair and cloning processes in starfish may have implications for human medicine.[119]

Starfish have an unusual ability to displace foreign objects from their bodies, which makes them difficult to tag for research tracking purposes.[120]

In legend and culture

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A starfish with five legs. Used as an illustration of "Hope in God", a poem by Lydia Sigourney which appeared in Poems for the Sea, 1850

An aboriginal Australian fable, retold by the Welsh school headmaster William Jenkyn Thomas (1870–1959),[121] tells how some animals needed a canoe to cross the ocean. Whale had one but refused to lend it, so Starfish kept him busy, telling him stories and grooming him to remove parasites, while the others stole the canoe. When Whale realized the trick he beat Starfish ragged, which is how Starfish still is today.[122]

In 1900, the scholar Edward Tregear documented The Creation Song, which he describes as "an ancient prayer for the dedication of a high chief" of Hawaii. Among the "uncreated gods" described early in the song is the starfish.[123]

Georg Eberhard Rumpf's 1705 The Ambonese Curiosity Cabinet describes the tropical varieties of Stella Marina or Bintang Laut, "Sea Star" in Latin and Malay respectively, known in the waters around Ambon. He writes that the Histoire des Antilles reports that when the sea stars "see thunder storms approaching, [they] grab hold of many small stones with their little legs, looking to ... hold themselves down as if with anchors".[124]

As food

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Fried starfish skewers in China

Starfish are sometimes eaten in China,[125] Japan[126][127] and in Micronesia.[128] Georg Eberhard Rumpf found few starfish being used for food in the Indonesian archipelago, other than as bait in fish traps, but on the island of "Huamobel" [sic] the people cut them up, squeeze out the "black blood" and cook them with sour tamarind leaves; after resting the pieces for a day or two, they remove the outer skin and cook them in coconut milk.[124]

As collectables

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Starfish are in some cases taken from their habitat and sold to tourists as souvenirs, ornaments, curios or for display in aquariums. In particular, Oreaster reticulatus, with its easily accessed habitat and bright coloration, is widely collected in the Caribbean. In the early to mid 20th century, this species was numerous along the West Indian coasts, but collection and trade have severely diminished its numbers. In the State of Florida, O. reticulatus is listed as endangered and its collection is illegal. Nevertheless, it is still sold both in and outside its range.[65] A similar phenomenon exists in the Indo-Pacific for species such as Protoreaster nodosus.[129]

Starfish on sale as souvenirs in Cyprus

References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Starfish, also known as sea stars, are exclusively marine invertebrates belonging to the class Asteroidea within the phylum Echinodermata, characterized by their distinctive star-shaped bodies typically featuring five symmetrical arms extending from a central disk.[1] These animals exhibit radial symmetry as adults, a trait shared with relatives such as sea urchins, sand dollars, and sea cucumbers, and lack features like gills, scales, or fins found in true fish.[2] With approximately 2,000 known species, starfish vary widely in size—from less than 1 centimeter to over 1 meter in diameter—and in color, including vibrant reds, blues, and oranges, inhabiting diverse marine environments from intertidal tide pools to abyssal depths exceeding 6,000 meters.[1][3][4] Starfish possess a unique water vascular system, a hydraulic network of canals and tube feet that facilitates locomotion, respiration, and prey capture by pumping seawater through their bodies rather than relying on blood circulation.[2] Their endoskeleton consists of calcareous ossicles embedded in a tough, spiny outer skin, providing flexibility while protecting internal organs, including a two-part stomach capable of everting outside the body to enzymatically digest mollusks, barnacles, and other sessile invertebrates.[3] As opportunistic predators and scavengers, starfish play vital ecological roles in maintaining biodiversity on ocean floors by controlling populations of bivalves and influencing community structures in coral reefs, kelp forests, and rocky subtidal zones.[3] Some species, like the sunflower sea star, can achieve speeds up to 1 meter per minute using 15,000 tube feet, demonstrating remarkable adaptability in foraging behaviors.[1] Reproduction in starfish is predominantly sexual and external, with most species being dioecious (separate sexes) and releasing gametes into the water column for fertilization, though some can reproduce asexually via arm autotomy or fission.[2] Their regenerative prowess is one of their most notable traits: a severed arm can regrow into a complete individual under favorable conditions, a process supported by distributed nervous and genetic systems rather than a centralized "head."[3] Recent genomic analyses of species like Patiria miniata have shown that starfish bodies are genetically organized as a series of head-like segments along each arm, with no distinct trunk region, upending classical understandings of their bilateral ancestry and radial evolution.[5] This decentralized anatomy underscores their evolutionary divergence from other deuterostomes and highlights their resilience amid environmental threats like ocean acidification and habitat loss.[5]

Taxonomy

Etymology

The common name "starfish" derives from the Middle English compound "starrefyshe," first attested in the 1530s, combining "star" (from Old English stēorra, meaning a celestial body) with "fish" (from Old English fisc, referring to aquatic vertebrates), reflecting the creature's star-shaped body despite its lack of relation to true fish, which are vertebrates.[6][7] To address this taxonomic inaccuracy and reduce confusion with actual fish, marine biologists and conservation organizations have promoted the alternative name "sea star" since the late 20th century, emphasizing the animal's echinoderm nature rather than its superficial resemblance to fish.[8][9] In scientific literature, the term traces back to Carl Linnaeus's Systema Naturae (1758), where he classified various species under the genus Asterias (from Greek astēr, meaning star), often using the Latin descriptor "Stella Marina" (sea star) for their marine, star-like form.[10] Common names in other languages similarly highlight the stellar and oceanic aspects, such as French étoile de mer (star of the sea), avoiding any implication of being a fish.[11]

Classification

Starfish, or sea stars, are classified within the kingdom Animalia, phylum Echinodermata, subphylum Asterozoa, and class Asteroidea.[12] This placement reflects their shared deuterostome ancestry with other echinoderms, characterized by a coelomate body plan and marine habitat.[12] The class Asteroidea is defined by several key morphological traits, including adult pentaradial symmetry, the presence of ambulacral grooves along the arms that house rows of tube feet (podia), and a dorsoventrally flattened body typically with five to fifty arms radiating from a central disc.[12] These features distinguish asteroids from other asterozoans like ophiuroids (brittle stars), which exhibit more pronounced arm differentiation.[13] Asteroidea comprises seven orders: Brisingida, Forcipulatida, Notomyotida, Paxillosida, Spinulosida, Valvatida, and Velatida.[14] Among these, Valvatida is the most species-rich order with around 850 extant species (as of 2025), characterized by well-developed marginal plates that often outline the body periphery and paxillae (club-shaped ossicles) on the aboral surface, enabling diverse predatory and sessile lifestyles.[15] Forcipulatida, comprising about 280 species, features three-valved pedicellariae (pincer-like defensive structures) and four rows of tube feet per ambulacrum, adaptations suited to cold-water predation on mobile prey.[16] Spinulosida, a smaller order with roughly 140 species primarily in the family Echinasteridae, exhibits a reticulated body wall with spinelets and flattened arms, supporting detritivorous or omnivorous feeding in temperate and tropical environments.[17] Taxonomic classification within Asteroidea remains subject to debate, particularly regarding the order Paxillosida, whose primitive morphology—such as open ambulacral grooves and paxillose aboral surfaces—has been contested as either basal or derived based on conflicting morphological and molecular data.[18] Similarly, the placement of sea daisies (genus Xyloplax), small discoid asteroids formerly considered a separate class Concentricycloidea, has been resolved through molecular phylogenies as nested within Velatida, supported by transcriptomic analyses showing close affinity to families like Korethrasteridae.[19] These revisions, informed by studies up to 2023, highlight the role of genomic evidence in refining asteroid systematics.[19]

Diversity

Starfish, or sea stars, display substantial taxonomic diversity, encompassing approximately 2,000 extant species organized into about 370 genera and 39 families based on estimates as of 2025.[12][14] This richness reflects their adaptation to a wide array of marine environments, from intertidal zones to deep-sea habitats across all ocean basins.[20] Morphological variation among starfish is striking, particularly in body size and arm configuration. The smallest species, Parvulastra parvivipara, attains a diameter of only about 1 cm, making it one of the tiniest echinoderms known.[21] In contrast, larger species like Heliaster helianthus exhibit expansive arm spans exceeding 1 m, with individuals capable of bearing up to 50 arms, which radiate from a central disc to form a sun-like structure.[22] These differences in form influence locomotion, feeding, and predator avoidance strategies. Among notable species, the crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) stands out as a specialized corallivore, consuming coral polyps and occasionally triggering outbreaks that damage reef ecosystems in the Indo-Pacific.[23] Similarly, the sunflower sea star (Pycnopodia helianthoides) exemplifies multi-armed predation, using its 16 to 24 arms to capture mobile prey such as urchins and mollusks, thereby playing a key role in maintaining kelp forest balance.[24] Global biodiversity patterns show starfish richness peaking in the Indo-Pacific, where tropical waters support the majority of species due to favorable conditions for speciation and habitat variety, while polar regions host fewer taxa adapted to extreme cold.[20]

Anatomy

Body wall

The body wall of starfish forms a flexible, protective barrier enclosing the internal organs, consisting primarily of a calcareous endoskeleton made up of numerous ossicles—small, interlocking plates of magnesium calcite—embedded within a thick dermis of collagenous connective tissue.[25] This endoskeleton is covered externally by a thin epidermis composed of ciliated epithelial cells and mucus-secreting glandular cells, which aid in locomotion, sensory perception, and defense by trapping particles and deterring pathogens.[26][27] The ossicles vary in shape and size across body regions, forming a mesh-like network that provides rigidity while allowing articulation for bending and flexibility.[25] Defensive structures protrude from the body wall, integrated into the ossicular framework to protect against predators and maintain surface cleanliness. Spines, elongated extensions of the ossicles, create a spiny texture that impedes grazing, while pedicellariae—small, pincer-like appendages with movable jaws—actively remove debris, parasites, and small threats by snapping shut.[2][25] In species of the order Paxillosida, such as Astropecten, paxillae serve a similar role; these are specialized, pillar-like ossicles with flattened tops that form a dense, protective lattice on the aboral surface, enhancing armor-like defense.[28] The overall architecture centers on a small, pentagonal central disc from which typically five (but sometimes up to 40) slender arms radiate, each arm's body wall comprising longitudinal rows of ossicles linked by interossicular muscles and mutable connective tissue.[29][25] This mutable connective tissue, a unique collagen-based dermis, undergoes rapid, nervously mediated changes in stiffness—from soft and pliable to rigid—enabling the arms and disc to bend, twist, and adapt during locomotion or evasion without relying solely on muscles. The modular ossicle network and mutable connective tissue of the body wall underpin its regenerative potential, allowing isolated tissues to dedifferentiate, proliferate, and reform skeletal elements following injury.[30]

Water vascular system

The water vascular system is a distinctive hydraulic network unique to echinoderms, including starfish (class Asteroidea), that enables locomotion, prey manipulation, and gas exchange through the regulated flow of seawater. This system consists of interconnected canals and appendages filled with seawater, operating under hydrostatic pressure to power movements without a centralized pump.[2][29] Key components include the madreporite, a porous, sieve-like plate on the aboral surface of the central disc that serves as the primary entry point for seawater into the system. From the madreporite, water passes through the stone canal—a calcified tube lined with cilia that directs fluid to the ring canal, a circular channel encircling the mouth on the oral surface. The ring canal branches into five (or more in some species) radial canals that extend along the ambulacral grooves into each arm, supplying lateral canals that connect to the tube feet, or podia. Each podium is a muscular, extensible projection typically ending in a sucker, paired with an internal ampulla—a contractile, bulb-shaped sac that regulates fluid volume within the foot.[2][29][31] Functionally, the system relies on pressure changes: contraction of the ampulla expels fluid into the podium, extending it via hydrostatic pressure, while relaxation of the ampulla and contraction of podium muscles draw fluid back, retracting the foot and creating suction for adhesion. This mechanism allows starfish to crawl slowly across substrates, with coordinated waves of tube foot activity enabling speeds up to 15 cm per minute in some species, and to exert force for feeding, such as wedging tube feet between bivalve shells to pry them open. Seawater intake occurs via the madreporite, filtered by cilia, and the system's valves prevent backflow during these actions. The thin-walled surfaces of the tube feet also facilitate gas exchange, with oxygen diffusing across their epithelium into the coelomic fluid.[2][29][31][26] In most starfish species, the radial canals and tube feet are housed in open ambulacral grooves on the oral surface of the arms, exposing the podia for direct interaction with the environment. However, variations exist; for instance, some species have paddle-shaped tube feet adapted for burrowing in sediment rather than suction-based gripping, and in related groups like sea daisies (genus Xyloplax, class Concentricycloidea), the ambulacral grooves are closed, with tube feet arranged in a peripheral ring for attachment rather than locomotion. These canals are often protected by ossicles embedded in the body wall.[2]

Digestive and excretory systems

The digestive system of starfish (class Asteroidea) is a simple, tubular structure adapted for extracellular digestion of prey, consisting of a mouth on the oral surface, a short esophagus, a large cardiac stomach, a smaller pyloric stomach, a short intestine, a rectum, and a rudimentary anus on the aboral surface.[2] The cardiac stomach, which occupies much of the central disc, is highly eversible and can be extruded through the mouth to envelop and digest prey externally.[32] The pyloric stomach lies above the cardiac stomach and connects via ducts to paired pyloric caeca (digestive glands) extending into each arm, where nutrient absorption primarily occurs.[33] During feeding, starfish typically target sessile or slow-moving prey such as mollusks, using their tube feet to pry open shells before everting the cardiac stomach to cover the organism and secrete digestive enzymes that liquefy the tissues into a soupy consistency.[34] The partially digested material is then retracted into the pyloric stomach and caeca, where enzymes further break down nutrients for absorption into the coelomic fluid; undigested residues are compacted and expelled primarily through the mouth, with minor amounts passing through the small anus.[34] This process enables efficient predation without a complex jaw or teeth.[2] Excretion in starfish lacks specialized organs, relying instead on coelomocytes (amoebocytes) within the coelomic fluid to phagocytose metabolic wastes, such as ammonia, from cellular activities and transport them for elimination.[35] These amoebocytes aggregate wastes into structures like brown bodies, which are released through the podia (tube feet) via diffusion or expelled alongside digestive residues through the mouth.[36] The digestive glands play a minor role in waste processing by filtering some particulates before expulsion.[34] In species like the crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci), the digestive system is adapted for corallivory, with the everted cardiac stomach secreting specialized enzymes to rapidly break down coral polyps and tissues, allowing absorption of nutrients from preferred genera such as Acropora.[37] This enzymatic digestion efficiently liquefies live coral, leaving behind white skeletal scars, and supports high feeding rates during outbreaks.00969-X)

Nervous and sensory systems

The nervous system of starfish (class Asteroidea) is decentralized and lacks a true central brain, consisting instead of a circumoral nerve ring encircling the mouth and five radial nerve cords extending along the ambulacral grooves of each arm.[38][39] These radial nerves are ganglionated, featuring clusters of neuronal cell bodies that facilitate local processing and coordination of signals across the body without reliance on a centralized structure.[40] The system is divided into ectoneural (sensory-motor) and hyponeural (primarily motor) components, with extensive interconnections enabling integrated responses to stimuli.[39] Starfish possess rudimentary sensory organs distributed throughout the body to detect environmental cues. At the tip of each arm, a compound eyespot composed of photoreceptor cells (ommatidia) allows detection of light intensity and direction, aiding navigation and avoidance of predators.[41] Additionally, tactile and chemoreceptors are embedded in the tube feet (podia), enabling mechanosensation for touch and substrate texture, as well as chemosensation for detecting dissolved substances like prey odors or chemical gradients in the water.[42][43] These sensory inputs drive coordinated behaviors through the decentralized nervous network. The righting reflex, for instance, involves arm-specific coordination where intact arms assist in flipping the body upright by extending tube feet and leveraging the radial nerves for synchronized muscle activation.[40] Many species exhibit phototaxis, such as negative phototaxis in juveniles of the crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci), where eyespots guide movement toward shaded shelters.[41] Chemical sensing via tube feet chemoreceptors allows detection of prey, with species like Acanthaster responding to coral-derived cues over distances to initiate foraging.[41] Recent research has demonstrated that the coordination of hundreds of tube feet during locomotion relies on decentralized local mechanical feedback, independent of central neural control. Individual tube feet autonomously adjust their adhesion time based on local sensory input and mechanical load, with an inverse relationship between adhesion duration and crawling speed: longer contact times result in slower movement. This mechanism enables adaptation to challenging conditions, such as inverted postures (upside down relative to gravity), where tube feet increase adhesion times to maintain contact and propulsion, allowing continued locomotion despite reduced speed. These findings reveal a robust decentralized strategy that complements the ganglionated radial nerves and contributes to resilient motor behaviors, including aspects of the righting reflex.[44]

Circulatory and respiratory systems

Starfish possess an open circulatory system lacking a centralized heart, relying instead on a hemal system and coelomic fluid for nutrient and gas transport.[26] The hemal system consists of a ring vessel around the mouth (hyponeural hemal ring) and radial vessels paralleling the water vascular system, extending into the arms and connecting to structures like the gonads and digestive organs.[45] These vessels, along with an axial sinus near the stone canal, form a loosely organized network that facilitates the distribution of nutrients but plays a minimal role in respiration due to the absence of respiratory pigments in most species.[45] Circulation occurs primarily through the perivisceral coelom, where coelomic fluid bathes internal organs and is moved by ciliary action along the peritoneal lining, creating bidirectional flow.[26] Amoebocytes, or coelomocytes, suspended in this fluid transport oxygen, nutrients, and waste materials, including phagocytosing debris before portions of the fluid are periodically expelled.[26] Respiration in starfish is passive and diffusion-based, occurring across permeable surfaces without specialized lungs or gills.[26] Oxygen enters primarily through papulae—thin-walled, finger-like projections of the coelom extending through the aboral body wall—and tube feet, which together account for the majority of gas exchange in species like Asterias forbesi.[46] Papulae, present in dense clusters on the aboral surface, facilitate the transfer of dissolved oxygen from seawater into the coelomic fluid via simple diffusion, driven by concentration gradients and enhanced by ciliary beating that maintains fluid flow within the coelom.[26] In some species, the body wall itself contributes to minor gas exchange, while tube feet support respiration in the water vascular system.[26] Carbon dioxide and ammonia are similarly diffused outward, with papulae playing a dominant role in overall respiratory efficiency.[46] The circulatory and respiratory systems are interconnected through coelomic fluid dynamics, where ciliary action indirectly links hemal and water vascular components by ensuring constant renewal of fluid exposed to external seawater.[26] This setup supports low metabolic demands typical of echinoderms. In low-oxygen environments, such as hypoxic sediments, burrowing species like Astropecten irregularis exhibit adaptations.[47] Antarctic species, such as Odontaster validus, further tolerate reduced oxygen availability through inherently low metabolic rates, enabling survival in cold, potentially oxygen-limited waters.[47]

Secondary metabolites

Starfish, belonging to the class Asteroidea, produce a diverse array of secondary metabolites, primarily steroids and steroidal glycosides such as asterosaponins, which constitute over 80% of identified compounds, alongside minor classes including alkaloids and peptides.[48][49] These metabolites are biosynthesized in specialized cells within the body wall and are released through the coelomic fluid or surface structures to mediate interactions with the environment.[45] The primary functions of these secondary metabolites include chemical defense against predators, where asterosaponins exhibit potent hemolytic and cytotoxic activities that deter fish and other marine vertebrates by causing red blood cell lysis upon contact.[49][50] For instance, in species across orders like Forcipulatida and Valvatida, such as Lethasterias nanimensis, asterosaponins like thornasteroside A induce toxicity in predatory fish, contributing to the survival of starfish in diverse habitats.[51] Alkaloids, though less abundant, also play defensive roles; examples include imbricatine, a benzyltetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloid isolated from Dermasterias imbricata, which may inhibit microbial growth or deter fouling organisms.[52] Additionally, certain metabolites exhibit antimicrobial properties, protecting starfish from bacterial infections in microbially rich marine environments, as seen with peptides and glycosides in species like Stellaster equestris.[53] In predation contexts, toxins such as plancitoxin I from the crown-of-thorns starfish Acanthaster planci aid in prey immobilization through cytotoxic effects on neural and other tissues, though its primary action involves deoxyribonuclease activity leading to cell death.[54][55] These compounds hold significant pharmacological potential, particularly in anticancer research initiated in the early 2000s, with asterosaponins and polyhydroxysteroids demonstrating apoptosis induction in human tumor cell lines, such as breast and colorectal cancers, at non-toxic concentrations to normal cells.[28][56] Studies on extracts from species like Acanthaster planci and Asteropsis carinifera have identified metabolites that inhibit proliferation via oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction, paving the way for novel therapeutic agents.[57][58] Ecologically, these metabolites also facilitate symbiosis by modulating microbial communities on starfish surfaces, enhancing resilience in coral reef and benthic ecosystems.[59]

Life cycle

Sexual reproduction

Starfish exhibit two primary sexual reproductive strategies: gonochorism, where individuals have separate sexes, and simultaneous hermaphroditism, where individuals possess both male and female reproductive organs.[60] Most species are gonochoristic, with males producing sperm and females producing eggs, though a minority, such as certain asterinids, function as simultaneous hermaphrodites capable of self-fertilization or cross-fertilization.[60] Gonads, typically paired within each arm, develop seasonally and release gametes through gonopores located aborally near the arm bases.[29] Gamete release occurs via broadcast spawning, where millions of sperm and eggs are expelled into the surrounding seawater, often nocturnally to minimize predation.[29][61] Spawning is triggered by environmental cues, including seasonal changes in temperature and photoperiod, which stimulate gonad maturation and gamete release.[62] In species like the crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci), abrupt temperature increases of around 4°C can induce spawning, particularly in males.[63] Synchronization among individuals is facilitated by chemical signals, such as pheromones released from gonads, which prompt nearby starfish to aggregate and spawn concurrently, enhancing fertilization opportunities.[64] Some species align spawning with lunar cycles, though this varies by taxon and habitat.[63] Fertilization is external and takes place in the water column, where sperm must locate and penetrate eggs to form zygotes.[61] Success rates depend heavily on population density and gamete concentration; at high densities, fertilization can exceed 80-90%, but it declines rapidly with dilution in open water. In sparse populations, proximity during spawning, often mediated by pheromones, is critical for viable zygote formation.[64][65] While most starfish undergo broadcast spawning leading to free-swimming larvae, variations exist in brooding species. For instance, in Parvulastra exigua, eggs are retained and fertilized internally within a brood chamber, resulting in direct benthic development without a planktonic larval stage.[66] This strategy, observed in some asterinids, reduces dispersal but increases offspring survival in stable habitats.[67]

Larval development

Starfish, or asteroids, typically undergo a bipinnaria larval stage following fertilization, characterized by a free-swimming, ciliated form with bilateral symmetry that enables locomotion and planktotrophic feeding on microalgae and other plankton. The bipinnaria features a looped ciliated band divided into pre- and post-oral portions along ciliated arms, facilitating both swimming and particle capture for nutrition, supplemented initially by maternal yolk reserves. As development progresses, the bipinnaria transforms into the brachiolaria stage, where three elongated brachia (arms) and an adhesive disk develop at the anterior end, specialized for substrate exploration and attachment during settlement. This stage retains feeding capabilities but shifts emphasis toward competent settlement, with the brachia containing sensory structures for assessing suitable benthic habitats.[68] Metamorphosis occurs upon settlement, during which a juvenile rudiment—a pentaradial disk—forms on the left posterior side of the brachiolaria, followed by inversion of the rudiment to establish the adult oral surface outward and achieve radial symmetry.[69] The larval body largely resorbs, with adult structures such as tube feet emerging from the rudiment, marking the transition to a benthic juvenile starfish. The planktonic phase, encompassing bipinnaria and brachiolaria stages, generally lasts 2–10 weeks, varying by species, temperature, and food availability; for instance, in Asterias amurensis, the brachiolaria develops around 26–28 days post-fertilization at laboratory conditions. While most asteroids exhibit planktotrophic development, variations include lecithotrophic larvae in brooding species, such as Leptasterias hexactis, where large yolky eggs support non-feeding development within the parent's pouch, bypassing extensive planktonic feeding.[70] Direct development, skipping the free-swimming phase entirely, occurs in species like Parvulastra exigua, resulting in immediate benthic juveniles.[71]

Asexual reproduction

Asexual reproduction in starfish, or asteroids, occurs through two primary mechanisms: fission and autotomy followed by regeneration. In fission, the central disc splits into two or more fragments, each of which regenerates into a complete individual; this is documented in approximately 21 species of asteroids. Autotomy involves the voluntary detachment of one or more arms, often with a portion of the central disc attached, forming a "comet" that regenerates a full body; this method is observed in about six asteroid species. These processes produce genetically identical clones, resulting in populations with low genetic diversity compared to sexually reproducing groups.[72] Fission typically begins with a transverse cleavage across the disc, triggered by environmental stressors such as mechanical disturbance or temperature changes, and is regulated by endogenous chemical signals. Each resulting fragment, containing vital organs like parts of the digestive and nervous systems, undergoes regeneration to form a new starfish within weeks to months, depending on species and conditions. Autotomy, in contrast, starts with arm shedding at a specific fracture plane, where the detached arm regenerates a new disc and additional arms; this can occur spontaneously or in response to predation attempts. Both mechanisms allow for rapid clonal propagation, providing an ecological advantage in sparse or patchy habitats by enabling quick colonization and increased population density without reliance on mates.[72][73] Asexual reproduction is more prevalent in tropical and subtropical genera, such as Linckia and Ophidiaster, where it facilitates dispersal in warm, stable waters, while it is rarer in polar regions. For example, Linckia multifora employs autotomy, with detached arms forming independent individuals that regenerate fully, often observed in Indo-Pacific reefs. Ophidiaster species, like O. cribrareus, similarly use arm autotomy for cloning, contributing to dense clonal populations in tropical environments. In contrast, the polar-temperate species Stephanasterias albula relies on obligate fission, splitting seasonally in spring and summer to produce clones at rates allowing division every 1-2 years, which supports survival in resource-limited cold waters. These strategies highlight how asexual modes enhance fitness in isolated populations by bypassing the need for sexual encounters.[72][74][73]

Regeneration

Starfish exhibit remarkable regenerative capabilities, primarily through the process of arm regrowth following autotomy or injury. Upon arm loss, wound healing occurs rapidly within hours, followed by the formation of a blastema—a mass of undifferentiated, proliferative cells at the amputation site. This blastema arises primarily from dedifferentiated cells, where specialized tissues such as coelomic epithelium and muscle undergo epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT) to revert to a progenitor-like state and migrate to the wound.[75] Coelomocytes, circulating immune cells in the coelomic fluid, also contribute as stem-like progenitors; they are recruited to the site, proliferate, and differentiate to support tissue repair and blastema development.[75] Proliferation within the blastema drives outgrowth, with cells differentiating into radial nerve, muscles, and skeletal elements, enabling full arm regeneration over several weeks to months, depending on species and environmental conditions.[76] The regenerative capacity varies by species but is generally high in asteroids like Asterias. A single arm containing a portion of the central disc—typically at least 20% of the original body mass—can regenerate an entire new starfish, as the disc houses vital structures including parts of the digestive and reproductive systems.[77] In rare cases, such as certain tropical species (e.g., Linckia spp.), even arm fragments lacking disc tissue can initiate regeneration; these "comet" forms exhibit comet-like crawling behavior via tube feet before forming a new disc and additional arms.[78] This process underscores the decentralized nature of starfish anatomy, where arms retain regenerative potential independent of the full body. At the molecular level, regeneration involves conserved signaling pathways that pattern tissue regrowth. Wnt signaling is crucial, with ligands like Wnt6 and Wnt10A upregulated in the blastema to promote cell proliferation and axis specification during arm regeneration in species such as Echinaster sepositus.[79] Hox genes, including HOXA13 homologs, exhibit dynamic expression patterns along the proximodistal axis, guiding differentiation of skeletal and muscular components similar to their roles in development.[80] These mechanisms position starfish as valuable models for human regenerative medicine, particularly in studying dedifferentiation and stem cell activation for tissue engineering.[80] Regeneration has physiological limits, requiring sufficient resources for success. Fragments must retain at least about 20% of the central disc to support full-body reconstruction, as smaller portions lack the necessary proliferative capacity.[81] Starvation inhibits the process, as nutrient deprivation reduces coelomocyte proliferation and increases mortality in regenerating individuals, highlighting the energy-intensive nature of blastema formation and outgrowth.[82]

Lifespan

Starfish, or sea stars (class Asteroidea), exhibit considerable variation in lifespan across species, typically ranging from 5 to 10 years in the wild for many temperate and tropical forms, though some larger species achieve greater longevity. For instance, the ochre sea star Pisaster ochraceus reaches maturity in about five years and has a maximum recorded lifespan of 34 years, based on growth ring analysis in ossicles. In contrast, the common sea star Asterias rubens has an estimated lifespan of 7 to 8 years, determined from size-frequency distributions and growth studies. The crown-of-thorns sea star Acanthaster planci has an estimated maximum lifespan of 15 to 17 years in the absence of predation and resource limitations, though the actual lifespan in the wild is unknown.[45][83][84] Post-settlement growth in starfish is generally slow and indeterminate in many species, allowing continuous size increase throughout life without a fixed maximum, though rates are heavily influenced by environmental factors such as temperature and food supply. Growth is often modeled using the von Bertalanffy growth equation, with the growth coefficient K varying by species, size, and environmental conditions. There is no single typical value, but reported K values commonly range from 0.05 to 0.5 yr⁻¹, with many species around 0.3–0.5 yr⁻¹. Examples include Archaster angulatus (0.35–0.49 yr⁻¹), Astropecten aranciacus (0.32–0.44 yr⁻¹), Pycnopodia helianthoides (0.03–0.08 yr⁻¹), and Asterias rubens (~2.94 yr⁻¹, indicating rapid early growth).[85][86][87][88] In A. rubens, for example, arm radius expands by an average of 28.5 mm in the first year and 13 mm in the second, with overall growth decelerating thereafter. Elevated temperatures, up to around 21°C, accelerate growth and feeding rates by boosting metabolic activity, while food restriction significantly impairs gonad and somatic development, leading to slower overall progression. Their regenerative abilities contribute to extended longevity by enabling tissue repair and reducing the impacts of senescence, as evidenced in species capable of cloning, which show less age-related telomere shortening compared to sexually reproducing individuals.[83][89][90][91] Mortality in starfish arises primarily from predation, disease, and environmental stressors, often curtailing lifespan across life stages. Predators such as fish, birds, and larger invertebrates target juveniles and adults, with keystone species like P. ochraceus experiencing episodic mass die-offs that reduce population persistence. Diseases, notably sea star wasting syndrome (SSWD), cause rapid tissue degradation and high mortality rates, with studies reporting up to 88.5% juvenile loss in affected populations due to bacterial overgrowth and hypoxia. In August 2025, researchers identified the bacterium Vibrio pectenicola as a key cause of SSWD.[92][93][94] The disease has led to over 90% declines in some species, such as the sunflower sea star, though signs of recovery have been observed in Oregon populations as of late 2025.[95] Environmental stresses, including osmotic changes from salinity fluctuations, further elevate mortality by impairing behavior and physiology, particularly in intertidal habitats. Species in tropical regions often face shorter effective lifespans due to higher metabolic demands and intense predation pressure.[96]

Ecology

Distribution and habitat

Starfish, belonging to the class Asteroidea, exhibit a cosmopolitan distribution across all oceans of the world, encompassing tropical, temperate, and polar regions, but they are entirely absent from freshwater habitats. Approximately 1,900 species have been described, making them one of the most diverse groups of echinoderms.[13] These organisms primarily occupy marine benthic environments, favoring rocky or sandy subtidal zones, coral reefs, and seagrass beds, with the majority of species concentrated in coastal areas rather than open ocean or deep-sea settings. While some species thrive in intertidal zones exposed to air at low tide, others extend into deeper waters; for instance, Pisaster ochraceus is commonly found on wave-swept rocky shores from the low intertidal down to about 90 meters. At the opposite extreme, certain deep-sea forms, such as those in the genus Zoroaster, inhabit bathyal to abyssal depths ranging from 200 to over 5,000 meters.[45][97][13] Species diversity peaks in tropical latitudes, particularly in the Indo-Pacific and western Atlantic, where warm, shallow waters support a high number of taxa adapted to reef and sedimentary substrates. In contrast, polar regions host fewer but highly specialized species; for example, Odontaster validus dominates Antarctic benthic communities, tolerating subzero temperatures and ice-scoured seabeds. Recent analyses of over 200,000 occurrence records confirm that starfish diversity gradients vary distinctly with latitude and depth, deviating from typical marine patterns by showing elevated richness in some mid-depth and higher-latitude zones.[13][98][99] The broad geographic spread of starfish is largely enabled by their reproductive strategy, in which many species release eggs and sperm into the water column, producing planktonic larvae that drift with ocean currents for weeks to months before settling. This bipinnaria or brachiolaria larval stage promotes long-distance dispersal, allowing colonization of distant habitats and contributing to the class's global presence.[100]

Diet and feeding

Starfish, or sea stars (class Asteroidea), exhibit diverse feeding strategies, predominantly as carnivorous predators and opportunistic scavengers, with diets centered on mollusks such as bivalves and gastropods, echinoids, and corals, though some species incorporate algae or detritus.[101][102] Most species are selective in prey choice, targeting sessile or slow-moving invertebrates that can be subdued using their tube feet, while a minority are herbivorous, grazing on microalgae, biofilms, or macroalgae.[103] This dietary flexibility allows starfish to exploit varied benthic habitats, from intertidal zones to deep-sea environments.[104] Feeding typically involves extraoral digestion, where the cardiac stomach is everted through the mouth to envelop and enzymatically break down prey externally before retraction for absorption in the pyloric caeca.[105] Tube feet on the oral surface aid in prey manipulation, such as prying open bivalve shells by applying persistent suction and force, a process that can take 24 to 48 hours for larger mollusks due to the slow but relentless action.[106] In some cases, like sand-dwelling species such as Astropecten, prey is swallowed whole intraorally for internal digestion, while deep-sea brisingids extend arms to capture suspended particles or small organisms.[107] These mechanisms are regulated by neuropeptides that trigger stomach contraction and retraction, ensuring efficient nutrient uptake. Specific species illustrate this variability: the ochre sea star Pisaster ochraceus primarily targets mussels like Mytilus californianus in intertidal communities, exerting strong predatory pressure that structures rocky shore ecosystems. The crown-of-thorns starfish Acanthaster planci is a specialized corallivore, consuming live coral polyps and causing outbreaks that devastate reefs when populations surge.[108] Herbivorous examples include Nidorellia armata, which feeds mainly on crustose coralline algae, significantly reducing algal cover in subtidal zones.[103] Overall, starfish function as secondary consumers in marine food webs, with their predation influencing prey populations and community dynamics.[106]

Predators and defenses

Starfish are preyed upon by a diverse array of marine and terrestrial organisms, including fish such as triggerfish (Balistidae family) that actively consume them by tearing off arms or the central disc, birds like gulls that pick them from intertidal zones during low tide, other echinoderms including predatory sea stars like the morning sun star (Solaster dawsoni), crabs, sea otters, and occasionally humans who harvest them for food, bait, or aquarium trade.[37][109][45] Vulnerability to predation is often size-dependent, with smaller juveniles and subadults facing higher risks due to their reduced physical defenses and slower escape capabilities compared to larger adults.[45] To counter these threats, starfish employ a combination of physical and behavioral defenses. Autotomy, the voluntary shedding of one or more arms, allows escape from a predator's grasp, with the detached arm sometimes distracting the attacker while the main body flees; this is followed by remarkable regenerative abilities, enabling regrowth from fragments as small as 1 cm in diameter.[45] Physical barriers include sharp, calcified spines covering the aboral surface that can deter or injure attackers, supplemented by pedicellariae—small, pincer-like structures that clamp onto intruders or remove fouling debris to maintain structural integrity.[45] Certain species produce saponins and other secondary metabolites in their body walls that impart a bitter taste or toxicity, discouraging consumption by fish and other vertebrates.[45] Camouflage through cryptic coloration or textural mimicry of surrounding substrates helps some species, like the crown-of-thorns starfish, avoid detection by visual hunters.[110] Behavioral strategies further enhance survival. Rapid burial into soft sediments using tube feet permits quick concealment from approaching threats, while arm waving can serve as a distraction display to misdirect a predator's attention.[111] Aggregation in groups may provide collective protection, diluting individual risk in high-predation areas.[45] A notable example is the sunflower sea star (Pycnopodia helianthoides), which attains speeds of up to 1 meter per minute—exceptional for echinoderms—to outpace predators like conspecific sea stars or fish, often combining this with autotomy for effective evasion.[112]

Ecological impacts

Starfish play pivotal roles in marine ecosystems, often acting as keystone predators that regulate community structure and maintain biodiversity. In rocky intertidal zones of the Pacific Northwest, the ochre sea star Pisaster ochraceus exemplifies this role; experimental removal of these predators in the 1960s led to rapid dominance by mussels (Mytilus californianus), which outcompeted and displaced diverse sessile species including barnacles, algae, and chitons, resulting in a significant decline in overall species richness from around 15 to 8 species per plot. This keystone effect, where the predator's presence disproportionately influences ecosystem dynamics relative to its abundance, promotes biodiversity by limiting the proliferation of dominant prey and allowing space for subordinate species to persist. Beyond positive regulation, starfish can exert negative ecological impacts through population outbreaks that disrupt habitat integrity. The crown-of-thorns starfish Acanthaster planci is notorious for such effects on Indo-Pacific coral reefs, where outbreaks—periodically recurring at densities exceeding 1,000 individuals per hectare—can consume up to 90% of live coral cover, shifting reefs toward algal-dominated states and reducing structural complexity that supports fish and invertebrate diversity.[113] These events, documented since the 1960s, alter trophic interactions by favoring corallivorous specialists and indirectly boosting herbivore populations, though prolonged outbreaks often lead to long-term reef degradation.[45] Starfish also contribute to ecosystem engineering and symbiotic interactions that enhance habitat heterogeneity and mutual benefits. Species like the cushion sea star Oreaster reticulatus in Caribbean seagrass beds engineer habitats by disturbing sediments during foraging, creating depressions and organic-enriched patches that increase microhabitat diversity for small crustaceans, polychaetes, and juvenile fish.[45] In terms of symbiosis, certain starfish such as Henricia spp. form mutualistic associations with sponges, where the starfish gains access to enhanced water flow for suspension feeding while potentially deterring predators from the sponge host through their presence.[45] Additionally, polychaete worms like Arctonoe spp. live commensally or mutualistically within the ambulacral grooves of starfish such as Dermasterias imbricata, feeding on mucus and detritus while possibly aiding in parasite removal.[114] Trophic cascades triggered by starfish population fluctuations underscore their ecosystem-wide influence. In Paine's removal experiments, the absence of Pisaster ochraceus not only favored mussels but also indirectly reduced algal cover, as mussel beds monopolized space previously occupied by macroalgae, altering primary producer dynamics and nutrient cycling in the intertidal zone. Similarly, declines in predatory starfish due to disease or environmental stress can propagate effects downward, allowing prey overabundance that reshapes benthic communities and potentially increases algal proliferation in compensatory responses observed in temperate reefs.[45]

Threats and conservation

Starfish populations face multiple anthropogenic and environmental threats that have led to significant declines in various species. Sea star wasting disease (SSWD), first observed in 2013 along the Pacific coast of North America, has devastated over 20 species, causing rapid tissue degradation and death within days.[115] In 2025, researchers identified a novel strain of the bacterium Vibrio pectenicida (FHCF-3) as the primary causative agent, particularly in sunflower sea stars (Pycnopodia helianthoides), with infections leading to lesions and disintegration of body tissues.[116] This disease has resulted in over 90% population declines for affected keystone species, altering intertidal and subtidal ecosystems. Recent studies as of March 2025 suggest that exposure to microplastics and pesticides may further hinder recovery of sunflower sea stars by impairing immune responses and regeneration.[117][118] Ocean acidification, driven by increasing atmospheric CO₂ absorption, poses a growing threat by reducing the availability of carbonate ions needed for calcification, leading to the dissolution of starfish ossicles and impaired skeletal integrity.[119] Studies on echinoderms, including starfish, show that elevated acidity slows the growth of calcium carbonate structures essential for locomotion and support, with combined effects of warming exacerbating regeneration and survival rates.[120] Additionally, bycatch in bottom-trawl and shrimp fisheries contributes to mortality, with sea stars often damaged or discarded, particularly in deeper waters where regenerating tissues indicate trawling impacts.[121] For instance, assessments of sunflower sea stars highlight bycatch from bottom-contact gear as a low but persistent concern for population recovery.[122] Outbreaks of the crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) in the Pacific, exacerbated by overfishing of natural predators and nutrient pollution, have prompted targeted control efforts. Programs on the Great Barrier Reef employ diver-led culling via injections of ox bile or vinegar, which kill the starfish without harming reefs, with over 73,000 individuals removed annually across hundreds of sites.[123] Climate-driven range shifts, such as poleward expansions of A. planci under warming scenarios, further complicate outbreak management by altering distribution patterns and increasing invasion risks to coral habitats.[124] Conservation initiatives have intensified in response to these threats. The sunflower sea star was assessed as Critically Endangered on the IUCN Red List in 2020, reflecting a greater than 90% decline since 2013 due to SSWD, with calls for habitat protection and disease research.[125] Recent 2025 studies in British Columbia's fjords identified cold-water refugia where P. helianthoides biomass persisted post-SSWD arrival, attributing refuge to lower temperatures and oceanographic barriers that limit bacterial spread.[126] Monitoring efforts leverage citizen science, such as Reef Check programs, where trained volunteers survey A. planci densities during global reef assessments to detect outbreaks early and inform culling priorities.[127] These combined strategies aim to bolster resilience amid ongoing environmental pressures.

Evolution

Fossil record

The fossil record of starfish (Asteroidea) begins in the Early Ordovician, approximately 480 million years ago, with the earliest known specimens exhibiting simple morphologies characterized by a central disc and arms composed of loosely connected ossicles. Lepidaster grayi, from the Silurian (Wenlock) of England, represents the earliest multiradiate starfish, featuring up to 13 arms and a scaly texture formed by imbricated marginal ossicles, marking a departure from the pentaradial symmetry dominant in modern forms.[128][20] These early fossils, often preserved as articulated skeletons in fine-grained sediments, provide evidence of rapid diversification shortly after the group's origin, though the record remains sparse due to the fragility of their endoskeletons. Starfish fossils become more abundant during the Devonian and Jurassic periods, reflecting peaks in diversity amid favorable depositional environments, yet they face significant taphonomic biases that limit preservation. In the Early Devonian Hunsrück Slate of Germany, a Lagerstätte with pyrite preservation, diverse assemblages including over 20 genera showcase varied morphologies foreshadowing modern taxa, such as forcipulate and spinulosan forms. Jurassic deposits, particularly the Solnhofen Limestone in Bavaria, Germany, yield exceptionally preserved specimens like Tropidaster pectinatus, occasionally retaining traces of soft tissues due to anoxic lagoonal conditions that minimized decay and scavenging. However, the epifaunal lifestyle and unfused ossicles of starfish lead to rapid post-mortem disarticulation—often within days—resulting in most fossils appearing as isolated elements or partially decayed fragments rather than complete bodies, which underrepresents true diversity.[20][129] Over geological time, evolutionary trends in starfish fossils indicate increasing complexity in skeletal architecture, with ossicles becoming more specialized for support and articulation, while arm configurations varied widely before stabilizing. Paleozoic forms often display multiradiate arms (up to 50 in some genera) and simpler ambulacral structures, evolving through the Mesozoic toward the more robust, pentaradial designs seen in extant groups, where adambulacral ossicles differentiate to form protective furrows. These changes, evident in formations like the Jurassic Oxford Clay, highlight adaptations to diverse marine habitats despite recurring mass extinctions, such as those at the Devonian-Permian boundary, which pruned but did not eliminate the lineage.[20][130]

Living groups

The living starfish, or sea stars, belonging to the class Asteroidea, encompass approximately 1,900 extant species distributed across seven major orders: Brisingida, Forcipulatida, Notomyotida, Paxillosida, Spinulosida, Valvatida, and Velatida.[45] These orders reflect a combination of morphological and molecular classifications, with recent phylogenetic studies using mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences indicating that some traditional groupings, such as Paxillosida and Valvatida, may be paraphyletic, prompting ongoing taxonomic revisions since the 2010s.[18][13] The order Valvatida represents the most diverse living group, with about 695 species in 172 genera and 17 families, many of which inhabit shallow tropical and temperate waters.[131] Prominent families include the Oreasteridae, known for their robust, cushion-like forms adapted to coral reef and seagrass environments; a representative species is Oreaster reticulatus, the red cushion star, which features a thick, pentagonal disc up to 50 cm in diameter and feeds primarily on algae and detritus.[132] Other Valvatida families, such as the Goniasteridae, exhibit diverse body shapes from flattened to nodular, often with granular or spinose abactinal surfaces for protection against predators.[13] Forcipulatida, comprising around 300 species, is characterized by predatory species with strong, suckered tube feet and pedicellariae for capturing mobile prey like mollusks and other echinoderms.[45] The family Asteriidae dominates this order, with species such as Asterias rubens, the common starfish of the North Atlantic, displaying five tapering arms and a flexible body that allows active foraging on rocky substrates.[83] These starfish often exhibit boreal and polar distributions, contributing significantly to intertidal and subtidal food webs.[13] Velatida includes approximately 200 species, predominantly deep-sea forms adapted to cold, high-pressure environments below 1,000 m, with thick, gelatinous bodies that may secrete mucus for defense.[133] The family Pterasteridae, or "slime stars," exemplifies this order; species like Pteraster tesselatus have broad discs and short arms covered in paxillose plates, enabling them to inhabit abyssal plains and seamounts where they scavenge organic matter.[134] Paxillosida, with over 400 species, features abactinal surfaces composed of paxillose plates—small, spine-crowned granules that form a protective granular pavement—suited to soft-sediment habitats where burrowing or sediment sifting occurs.[135] Families like Astropectinidae include sand stars such as Astropecten articulatus, which use paxillae to sift for bivalves and polychaetes; however, molecular analyses have questioned the monophyly of Paxillosida, suggesting it intermixes with Valvatida lineages.[18] The remaining orders—Brisingida (stalked deep-sea forms, ~100 species), Notomyotida (southern hemisphere mud stars, ~50 species), and Spinulosida (tropical spinose species, ~150 species)—add further diversity, with Brisingida notable for its suspension-feeding adaptations in bathyal zones via elongated arm stalks.[45][136] These groupings highlight the ecological versatility of living starfish, from polar shallows to hadal depths, informed by post-2010 molecular phylogenies that have refined family-level boundaries.[13]

Extinct groups

The extinct groups of starfish, primarily from the Paleozoic era, include the somasteroids, a basal clade regarded as transitional to true asteroids and ophiuroids, originating in the Early Ordovician and characterized by primitive skeletal features.[13] Somasteroids possessed open ambulacral grooves and fewer ossicles compared to modern asteroids, with rod-like elements called virgals radiating from the ambulacral skeleton, enabling a more flexible body structure than later forms.[137] These traits distinguished them as stem-group asterozoans, bridging earlier stellate echinoderms and the crown-group Asteroidea.[13] Key examples of Paleozoic somasteroids include genera like Ophioxenikos and Hudsonaster, which exhibited star-shaped bodies with short, broad arms and simplified ossicle arrangements, reflecting their early evolutionary position.[138] Other extinct Paleozoic asteroid families, such as those within early stem asteroids, displayed similar primitive morphologies, including reduced ambulacral flooring and less integrated arm structures.[13] Extinction events impacted these groups significantly during the Permian-Triassic boundary, where many Paleozoic lineages were lost, though the overall class Asteroidea persisted through surviving post-Paleozoic clades.[13] Despite these losses, no complete class-wide extinction occurred, allowing for Triassic recovery and diversification.[13] Transitional forms linking somasteroids to ophiuroids appear in the Devonian, such as Helianthaster rhenanus, which combined asteroid-like central discs with elongated, ophiuroid-resembling arms, highlighting shared evolutionary origins within Asterozoa.[13] These Devonian fossils provide evidence of gradual divergence between asteroid and ophiuroid lineages from common somasteroid ancestors.[139]

Phylogeny

Starfish, or Asteroidea, belong to the subphylum Asterozoa within the phylum Echinodermata, forming a sister group to Ophiuroidea (brittle stars and basket stars) in the clade Asterozoa.[140] This Asterozoa clade is positioned basal to Echinozoa, which encompasses Echinoidea (sea urchins) and Holothuroidea (sea cucumbers), within the larger subphylum Eleutherozoa.[141] The divergence of Asterozoa from other echinoderm lineages is estimated at approximately 500 million years ago, during the Early Ordovician period.[142] Internally, the phylogeny of Asteroidea has been reconstructed using molecular markers such as 18S rRNA and mitochondrial genes (including COI and 16S rRNA), often integrated with morphological data from skeletal and soft tissue characters.[20] Basal clades, exemplified by Paleoasteridae, represent early Paleozoic lineages that diverged soon after the group's origin but suffered significant extinction at the Permian-Triassic boundary, leaving few direct descendants.[20] Crown-group Asteroidea (Neoasteroidea), comprising all extant diversity, emerged and diversified in the post-Triassic Mesozoic era, following recovery from the end-Permian mass extinction.[20] A key molecular phylogeny by Janies et al. (2011), based on combined Sanger sequencing of nuclear and mitochondrial loci with morphological analysis, positions Forcipulatida near Valvatida among crown-group lineages, supporting their close evolutionary relationship within the diverse post-Paleozoic radiation.[141] Ongoing debates concern the monophyly of Paxillosida, with molecular evidence indicating it as a derived rather than primitive clade, challenging earlier morphology-based hypotheses of basal placement.[20]

Human relations

In research

Starfish, particularly species like Asterias rubens and Asterias forbesi, serve as valuable model organisms in regeneration research due to their remarkable ability to regrow entire arms following autotomy or injury. In these studies, the formation of a blastema—a mass of undifferentiated cells at the amputation site—has been a focal point, with proliferative cells accumulating to create structures exhibiting stem cell-like morphology. For instance, research on Asterias rollestoni demonstrated that nucleoside analogs inhibit blastema formation, confirming the role of cell proliferation in early regenerative stages. This blastema is rich in stem-like cells that contribute to tissue remodeling, providing insights into mesenchymal cell sources for appendage regrowth. Although early work on Asterias forbesi explored pyloric caeca repair timelines (5-6 weeks post-removal), more recent transcriptomic analyses in related Asterias species have revealed dynamic gene expression patterns from the stem cell-rich blastema phase to differentiation, highlighting conserved pathways like Wnt signaling in regeneration.[143][144][145][146] In developmental biology, starfish eggs have been widely utilized as models for studying fertilization mechanisms, especially the role of cortical granules in preventing polyspermy. Upon sperm entry, these granules undergo calcium-triggered exocytosis, releasing contents that modify the egg's extracellular matrix to form a protective fertilization envelope. A key study on Asterina pectinifera eggs showed a biphasic increase in phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP2) levels post-fertilization, linking membrane dynamics to cortical granule discharge and envelope hardening. This process, conserved across echinoderms, provides a tractable system for dissecting calcium signaling and vesicle fusion events essential for monospermic fertilization.[147][148] Starfish also contribute to neuroscience research through their decentralized nervous system, which lacks a centralized brain and instead features a radial nerve cord coordinating behaviors like locomotion and feeding. This architecture enables studies on distributed neural processing and learning analogs, where arm-specific ganglia process local sensory inputs to generate coordinated arm movements. Recent research has revealed that sea star locomotion emerges from purely local mechanical feedback among hundreds of tube feet, with each tube foot autonomously adjusting adhesion time in response to mechanical cues such as load and orientation, without requiring central coordination or a central pattern generator. Experiments on Asterias rubens, including FTIR-based imaging and perturbations like added mass or inverted posture, show that tube feet extend adhesion times when inverted to maintain movement, albeit slower, demonstrating robust adaptation in challenging orientations. This decentralized control supports adaptive righting responses and provides a model for resilient, fault-tolerant autonomous robotics, inspiring designs for soft, multicontact robots that continue functioning when flipped or in disrupted environments.[44][149][150][151] Recent research has extended starfish studies to tissue engineering, leveraging the pluripotency-like properties of coelomocytes—mobile cells in the coelomic fluid that act as progenitor cells during regeneration. These cells exhibit multipotent potential, migrating to injury sites to support blastema formation and tissue remodeling without forming a traditional localized blastema in some species. In Echinaster sepositus, coelomocytes contribute to wound repair and arm regrowth, inspiring applications in biomaterial scaffolds for human tissue regeneration by mimicking echinoderm dedifferentiation processes. This positions starfish coelomocytes as a natural analog for pluripotent stem cell therapies in engineering complex tissues. Additionally, as of 2025, studies on starfish lipids, such as those from [Asterias amurensis](/page/Asterias amurensis), highlight potential biomedical applications for immune enhancement and anti-inflammatory treatments.[152][153][154]

In culture and legend

In various Native American traditions, starfish hold symbolic significance tied to the sea and supernatural elements. Among the Kwakiutl people, a legend recounts how starfish originated as women who defied the trickster deity Mink, leading to their transformation into these marine creatures as punishment.[155] In Northwest Coast cultures, such as those of the Tlingit and Haida tribes, starfish serve as clan symbols, often carved on totem poles to represent identity and heritage.[155] Additionally, starfish are associated with the wealth of the sea god Kumugwe (also known as Komokwa), embodying abundance and the bounty of underwater realms in these oral traditions.[155] During the 19th century, starfish gained prominence in European art, literature, and popular science, particularly through the rise of home aquaria. Naturalist Philip Henry Gosse's influential book The Aquarium: An Unveiling of the Wonders of the Deep Sea (1856) featured detailed illustrations and descriptions of starfish, portraying them as captivating examples of marine diversity and sparking widespread interest in keeping them as aquarium specimens.[156] This work contributed to a Victorian craze for marine aquaria, where starfish were admired for their symmetrical forms and viewed as accessible wonders of the natural world, blending scientific observation with aesthetic appeal.[157] In modern media, starfish appear as endearing characters that highlight their unique traits. In the 2003 Pixar film Finding Nemo, the character Peach, a starfish voiced by Allison Janney, serves as a vigilant lookout in a dentist's aquarium, contributing to the story's themes of friendship and exploration while anthropomorphizing the creature's observant nature.[158] Contemporary cultural expressions often draw on starfish biology for symbolism, with tattoos depicting them as emblems of resilience and renewal due to their regenerative abilities.[159]

As food and collectibles

Starfish are consumed as a novelty food in parts of Asia, particularly in China, where they are dried and sold as street snacks in markets such as those in Beijing and Qingdao. These preparations often involve frying or grilling the dried specimens on sticks, with the edible portions primarily consisting of the arms' inner tissues after removing the outer skeleton. Despite their use, starfish have limited nutritional appeal for widespread human consumption due to a bitter taste from saponins, though certain species like Asterias amurensis are recognized as a viable marine food source rich in omega-3 fatty acids and phospholipids.[160][161][162] In the collectibles trade, dried starfish from tropical regions are popular souvenirs, often beach-collected and sold for home decor, crafts, or nautical themes in markets worldwide. Species like the sugar starfish (Ophidiaster ophidianus) are commonly traded in this manner, contributing to a broader marine ornamental market valued at approximately US$2 billion annually as of 2025, though specific volumes for starfish remain underreported.[163][164] For aquarium enthusiasts, certain species such as the chocolate chip sea star (Protoreaster nodosus) are kept as pets in fish-only-with-live-rock setups, where they scavenge detritus but pose risks to corals and are not suitable for reef tanks.[165][166] Overcollection for souvenirs and the aquarium trade has led to local population declines in some tropical areas, disrupting benthic ecosystems where starfish serve as predators or scavengers, though disease outbreaks often compound these pressures more severely. No starfish species are currently regulated under the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES), but sustainable harvesting practices are recommended to mitigate impacts.[167][168][169] Historically, in 18th-century Europe, starfish were prized as curiosities in cabinets of natural history, featured in encyclopedic works like the Encyclopédie Méthodique with detailed engravings illustrating their exotic forms alongside shells and corals. These collections, such as those in the Museum Stobaeanum, reflected the era's fascination with marine biodiversity as symbols of wonder and scientific inquiry.[170][171]

References

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