Red starfish

Red starfish

Red starfish
Echinaster sepositus
Max. size: 20 cm

 

Geographical distribution:
Often found in the English Channel, and is abundant in the Mediterranean.

 

Biology:
The red starfish is very common and can be easily identified by its bright colour. Its five long arms enable it to move around slowly on the sea floor, using its ambulacrals.  It feeds on small organic particles or sponges.  
This creature belongs to the group of animals known as echinoderms (spiny skinned animals), which includes sea cucumbers and urchins: these strange creatures characteristically have pentametric radial symmetry (the body is made up of five parts around a central axis). As a result, starfish have the extraordinary gift of regeneration: a whole animal can be reconstituted from a single arm.
To reproduce, starfish discharge sperm and eggs into the sea; fertilisation creates a ciliate planktonic larva, which attaches itself to a substratum to continue its evolution.


Back to the Mediterranean Collection

  • Moon jellyfish
  • Lumpsucker
  • Green moray
  • Giant crab
  • Wolf-eel
  • Turbot
  • Great barracuda
  • Common ormer
  • Red starfish
  • Octopus
  • Red damselfish
  • Sand tiger shark
  • Lemon shark
  • Sandbar shark
  • Nurse shark
  • Blacktip reef shark
  • Hawksbill turtle
  • Grouper
  • Green turtle
  • Loggerhead turtle
  • The anemone and the clown fish
  • Nautilus
  • Bluespine unicorn fish
  • Longlure frogfish
  • Pineapple fish
  • Red lion fish
  • Red Piranha
  • Lookdown fish
  • Anableps, or four-eyed fish
  • Mudskipper
  • Florida Turtle
  • Cardinal fish
  • Orbicular batfish
  • Goldsinny
  • Spiral tube-worm