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Sea Cucumber

Sclerodactyla briareus (Lesueur 1824)

Breeding Season

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
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Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Care of Adults

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Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
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Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Fertilization and Cleavage

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Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Later Stages of Development

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Woods Hole, Maine
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Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Living Material

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine

References

  • Colwin, L. H., 1948. Note on the spawning of the holothurian, Thyone briareus (Lesueur). Biol. Bull., 95: 296-306.
  • Edwards, C. L., 1909. The development of Holothuria floridana Pourtales with especial reference to the ambulacral appendages. J. Morph., 20: 211-230.
  • Just, E. E., 1929. The production of filaments by echinoderm ova as a response to insemination, with special reference to the phenomenon as exhibited by ova of the genus Asterias. Biol. Bull., 57: 311-325.
  • Ohshtma, H., 1921. On the development of Cucumaria echinata v. Marenzeller. Quart. J. Micr. Sci., 65: 173-246.
  • Ohshima, H., 1925a. Notes on the development of the sea-cucumber, Thyone briareus. Science, 61: 420-422.
  • Ohshima, H., 1925b. Pri la maturigo kaj fekundigo ce la ovo de l'markukumoj. Bulteno Scienca de la Facultato Terkultura; Kyusu Imp. Univ., 1: no. 2, pp. 100-106 (in Japanese and Esperanto).

license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Preparation of Cultures

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Procuring Gametes

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

The Unfertilized Ovum

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
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copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Time Table of Development

provided by Egg Characteristics and Breeding Season for Woods Hole Species
Woods Hole, Maine
license
cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
Donald P. Costello and Catherine Henley
bibliographic citation
Costello, D.P. and C. Henley (1971). Methods for obtaining and handling marine eggs and embryos. Marine Biological Laboratory, Woods Hole, MA (Second Edition)
author
Costello, D.P.
author
C. Henley

Distribution

provided by EOL authors
“Nova Scotia, southward along the eastern seaboard of the United States and around the Gulf of Mexico coastline to Texas. It is also reported from Venezuela (Martinez 1991b). In southern Florida, it has been found in Biscayne Bay and off Key West. Depth: Previously reported from 0 to 66 m (217 ft); a museum (USNM) specimen from off Georgia was collected at 183 m (600 ft) (Miller, previously unpublished)” (Hendler, Miller, Pawson, Kier 269)

Comprehensive Description

provided by EOL authors
Sclerodactyla briareus is a burrowing sea cucumber of medium size found in the North Atlantic and off the coast of Venezuela. Adults reach lengths of 12 to 15 cm. The body is dark green or brown in color, with some individuals so dark as to appear almost black. The introvert (frontal area, including tentacles, that can be withdrawn into the body) and tentacle branches are gray, while the tentacle stems are black. The body is thick throughout its whole length with an especially swollen middle. Both ends curve slightly upwards. S. briareus is a sturdy species, able to survive in brackish waters that have too low of a salinity level for most other echinoderms. It can survive extended periods of hypoxia as well. When threatened, S. briareus can eject its internal organs in order to tangle and confuse predators.

Behavior

provided by EOL authors
Sclerodactyla briareus adults bury themselves in the sediment at the ocean floor, leaving only the mouth and anus protruding into the open water. During winter in colder climes, it withdraws more fully into the ocean floor and hibernates. It will also withdraw temporarily in response to the removal of a light source. It will rise from the sediment and expose more of its body in response to diminishing oxygen concentrations. S. briareus is able to tolerate lower salinity water conditions better than most echinoderms, allowing it to survive in brackish environments. It also has impressive tolerance of hypoxic conditions, demonstrating the ability to survive them for over two days at a time. S. briareus exhibits selective feeding behavior, eating significant amounts of organic detritus, as well as the ability to directly absorb free amino acids from the water. In areas where S. briareus is particularly abundant, large numbers of this species may be washed ashore by violent storms. Like many sea cucumbers, S. briareus resorts to autotomy of its internal organs and the forward sections of its body as a defensive mechanism. Autotomy can also be induced by fouled or toxic water. The unsavory nature of its tissues, particularly the skin and genitals, is a further protective measure against predators.

Size

provided by EOL authors
“This is a medium-sized sea cucumber that can reach a length of 12-15 cm (5-6 in). The body is stout and robust, swollen near the middle, and gently tapered at each end. Generally the mouth and anus are curved slightly upward. Specimens excavated from soft sediment contort their bodies into a spherical shape about the size of a golf ball by bringing mouth and anus into close proximity. The body wall is thin and very soft, because of the small number of skeletal ossicles and the numerous hairlike tube feet scattered over the entire body. The tube feet are cylindrical, though somewhat tapered near their sucking disks, and they are longest and most numerous on the ventral surface. The mouth is surrounded by eight large and bushy tentacles and two ventral tentacles about one-fourth the size of their neighbors. The anus is surrounded by five large, triangular, radial teeth, each of which is overlain by two pairs of papillae, the inner pair twice the length of the outer pair. The number of ossicles is greatly reduced in large, old individuals, although some usually remain in the feet or in the body wall surrounding the mouth and anus. The body wall ossicles are tables with a flat, squarish disk; in the feet the tables have an elongate curved disk. Both types of tables have tall spires composed of four pillars. In life, S. briareus is green or brown, although some individuals appear to be almost black. Usually, conspicuous darker patches of pigment cover the mouth and anus and are especially noticeable when the body wall is contracted into a spherical shape. In some individuals, the tube feet are brownish orange. The introvert is gray to black, the tentacle stems black, and the tentacle branches gray” (Hendler, Miller, Pawson, Kier 269)

Habitat

provided by EOL authors
“Soft, muddy substrates, often associated with seagrass beds” (Hendler, Miller, Pawson, Kier 269)

Sclerodactyla briareus

provided by wikipedia EN

Sclerodactyla briareus, commonly known as the hairy sea cucumber, is a species of marine invertebrate in the family Sclerodactylidae. It is found in shallow waters in the western Atlantic Ocean.

Description

Sclerodactyla briareus is an elongated oval or cigar-shaped sea cucumber and grows to about 15 centimetres (5.9 in). It often adopts a characteristic pose with both ends raised above the substrate. At the anterior end there is a mouth surrounded by a ring of ten, short, branched feeding tentacles.[2] These are modified tube feet that can be retracted back into the mouth when the animal is not feeding. The surface of the body is divided into five ambulacral areas with five shallow interambulacral grooves in between. Internally there are five bands of muscle running along the ambulacrae and there are also transverse bands of muscles. Just behind the tentacles is a group of small ossicles, calcareous stiffening plates, forming a short tube surrounding the pharynx. These provide a skeletal support for the muscles and internal organs. The skin is thick and leathery and the tube feet are scattered rather than being in orderly rows, protruding as soft finger-like projections from the body wall.[3] The minute calcareous spicules that are embedded in the skin are characteristic for the species, being square or round and table-shaped with spires formed of four pillars.[4] The color is dark greenish-brown or charcoal grey with pale grey tentacles on blackish stems.[5]

Distribution

Sclerodactyla briareus is found in shallow water along the east coast of the United States from Massachusetts to Florida, plus the Gulf of Mexico, the Caribbean Sea, and extending southward as far as Venezuela.[5][3]

Biology

Sclerodactyla briareus is a scavenger and filter feeder, collecting organic matter with its feeding tentacles and thrusting the particles into its mouth. It is gonochoristic with individuals being either male or female although there is no outward difference in appearance. Fertilization is external and the developing larvae form part of the plankton.[3]

Sclerodactyla briareus burrows in soft substrates and is more tolerant than many other echinoderms of water with low salinity levels or low oxygen levels. If threatened by predators it can eject its viscera in a sticky white mass to confuse and deter the aggressor.[5]

References

  1. ^ Paulay, Gustav (2010). "Sclerodactyla briareus (Lesueur, 1824)". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  2. ^ In Greek mythology Briareos was one of the multiple-handed giants. Ancient Greek skleros means hard and "daktylos" means finger: compare Sclerodactyly.
  3. ^ a b c Sclerodactyla briareus Invertebrate Anatomy OnLine. Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  4. ^ An illustrated key to the sea cucumbers of the South Atlantic Bight Retrieved 2012-02-12.
  5. ^ a b c Sclerodactyla briareus Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 2012-02-12.

[1]

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Sclerodactyla briareus: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Sclerodactyla briareus, commonly known as the hairy sea cucumber, is a species of marine invertebrate in the family Sclerodactylidae. It is found in shallow waters in the western Atlantic Ocean.

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Distribution

provided by World Register of Marine Species
Range covers both subprovinces of Acadian and Virginian

Reference

North-West Atlantic Ocean species (NWARMS)

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