Monday, April 6, 2009

Starfish Feeding!!: When Starfish Capture MOVING Prey!

(Future predation of vertebrates by astrobiological asteroidea!)

Well, one of the big shocks to most people is when I tell them that many species of the ever-humble sea star don't just settle for frakkin' mussels and clams..they actually GOES for the big, moving prey! shrimps, fishes and..?????

The"Cryptic" Predator

In New Zealand there lives this weird thing called Stegnaster inflatus (Asterinidae)
ambush star (Stegnaster inflatus)
(image from Seafriends.org in New Zealand)
For a starfish, Stegnaster has a really odd feeding mode. It sits up on its tippy toes as seen above and pretends to be a cave or some other crevice.


(From Michel Jangoux's Echinoderm Nutrition)
Following the diagram above, once some small prey has situated itself inside the "cave" with the body lifted above on its arm tips (A), followed by the star then slowly closing off the edges (C and D) until finally whatever is inside gets trapped and the cardiac stomach drops on the hapless prey (E)!! digesting it alive!!

According to Anthoni's Seafriends page this is effective not only against shrimps and snails, but also seahorses and other small fishes!!!

Active Predators When I say active, I mean, they actually use a specific structure for feeding on and obtaining prey....Many of these species practice some kind of bottom-water column type feeding.

Mainly, these beasts are big, multiarmed forcipulate asteroids...hmm...an interesting trend...


1. Stylasterias forreri
Probably one of the first sea stars to be observed feeding or catching moving prey, this animal gained notoriety quickly as being the "fish eating" starfish.
http://www.afsc.noaa.gov/RACE/media/photo_gallery/photos/SeaStars/stylasterias.jpg
The surface of this fairly large animal (diameter gets up to almost 1.5 feet across!) are covered with fairly large pedicellariae (teeth-like jaws) with many big jagged hooks that are deployed on batteries around all of the spines and are deployed as big grabby claws whenever food is detected.

I suspect that the Styla part of Stylasterias refers to "stylet"alluding to the sharp spines on the body surface.

Try as I might, I could not locate a photo or a picture of Stylasterias actually capturing a fish, so we here at the Echinoblog looked to our Echinoblogical Art Department to delivery a hypothetical rendering of this behavior:
(note that the fish (aka Sea Kitten) is probably not suffering nearly as much as it appears in the rendering!)

2.
Rathbunaster californicus
(borrowed from the MBARI website)
These animals live off the west coast of North America in fairly deep-water (about 100-800 m) and were the among the most recently reported to feed on mobile prey in a cool paper by Lynn Lauerman who observed them with ROVs and had many great opportunities to collect and watch them alive.


These handsome animals were named for Dr. Richard Rathbun, a curator of crustaceans at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. I wonder if Walter K. Fisher (who named the genus and species) realized that they fed on crustaceans when he named the starfish for him!


Although they have opportunistic tendencies (they don't always feed on mobile crustaceans) they do show a very strong propensity for eating things that swim by them..

3.
Labidiaster annulatus
I wrote a fairly involved post about this really neat Antarctic predator here. But short version...it uses its huge and jagged pedicellariae:
To feed on krill as they go swimming by it. Prey get held fast by these jagged jaws and are dragged down to the mouth where they are eaten alive! Aieee!!

4. The Brisingids!

The brisingid sea-star is an obvious large invertebrate that perches high in the coral branches to filter feed.
Shown here is Novodinia antillensis from the NOAA explorer site) Taken by S. Brooke.

I wrote a much more involved post about these neat animals here. But, but the short version is that brisingid asteroids are suspension feeders/predators that feed by using pedicellariae all over their arm spines to capture prey as the water current takes food through their arm "feeding basket" providing foodstuffs to be captured on the arm spines.

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