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Five arms, no brain and a global family (Read 52 times)
Jovial Monk
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Five arms, no brain and a global family
Aug 15th, 2025 at 10:01pm
 
One class of critters, the echinoderms, has five-fold radial symmetry: sea urchins, sea cucumbers (known as trepang when harvested for food) and starfish incl brittle stars.

Quote:
Ancient ‘alien’ brittle stars linked to relatives across the globe by a deep-sea evolutionary superhighway


Analysis finds that over millions of years, and without the help of fins or wings, brittle stars have quietly migrated across entire oceans




A branched brittle star:
...

Quote:
A global study of deep sea creatures called brittle stars has linked ecosystems on a “superhighway” reaching from southern Australia to the north Atlantic, uncovering close evolutionary ties across oceans.

Researchers analysed DNA from 2,699 brittle star specimens collected from all of the Earth’s oceans – from the equator to the poles, and the intertidal zone to the abyss (more than 3,500 metres deep) – and housed in 48 museums across the globe.

The unique dataset revealed connections stretching tens of thousands of kilometres, such as 17 species of brittle stars from Tasmania that have close relatives near Iceland, in the North Atlantic.


Map of distribution of brittle stars:
https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/jul/24/ancient-alien-brittle-stars-...

Quote:
“You might think of the deep sea as remote and isolated, but for many animals on the seafloor it’s actually a connected superhighway,” said Dr Tim O’Hara, senior curator of marine invertebrates at Museums Victoria Research Institute. . . .

Like sea stars, brittle stars live on the ocean floor. These ancient, spiny animals vary in colour and size, with some only a few millimetres wide, and others with metre-long arms.

“They’re slightly alien,” O’Hara said. “They don’t have a brain, they don’t have eyes. They just have a round disc, with a stomach and things like reproductive organs, and five arms.”

The analysis found that over millions of years and without the help of fins or wings, brittle stars have quietly migrated across entire oceans.

“We fly over the oceans now, and the Earth doesn’t seem too big to us,” he said. “But really, it is huge.”


It is not adults that do the migrating. As with many species of invertebrates it is the juveniles that do the spreading, floating in ocean currents that spread the species. With some species, like corals and barnacles, the adults are completely sessile, can’t move.

Quote:
How can such closely related species be found on opposite sides of the planet? The logical answer was the ability of brittle star larvae to drift on ocean currents in suspended animation, even for up to a year, O’Hara said.

The study also revealed connections based on depth, with similarities between brittle stars living 500m deep off Antarctica and others at 500m off Australia, almost like “horizontal highways of life through the ocean”, O’Hara said.

The scale of the dataset also offered bigger picture insights into the workings of the deep sea – which covers 50% of the planet – beyond the individual threads illuminated by ocean expeditions.

Scientists had suspected the deep sea to be more connected than shallow water systems, said Dr Nerida Wilson, a research scientist specialising in marine invertebrates, and a molecular biologist at the CSIRO who was not involved in the research.


https://www.theguardian.com/environment/2025/jul/24/ancient-alien-brittle-stars-...
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« Last Edit: Aug 16th, 2025 at 4:46am by Jovial Monk »  

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Jovial Monk
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Dogs not cats!

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Re: Five arms, no heart and a global family
Reply #1 - Aug 15th, 2025 at 10:09pm
 
Ah, forgot:

Original scientific paper:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09307-1.epdf
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