Starfish: Part 3 of 3: Internal Dissection and Identification

By Kathy Egbert
Last updated over 5 years ago
21 Questions
Before you begin Part 3, you must complete Part 2.
1.

The last physical task you had in Part II was to cut off the tips of the trivium rays. You were also instructed to study the pictures and diagrams provided to identify the structures in the cross-section view of the ray.
Locate the coelom and be prepared to identify its location. Raise your hand for the teacher to confirm that you have successfully identified this space. (2 pts)

1. Using the hand lens examine the cut end of the ray to locate the tube feet and ampullae. At the external end of eachtube foot is a sucker. The internal end of a tube foot forms the ampullae, a small, muscular, bulblike sac.
2. Observe that the ampullae and tube feet are found along the edge of a zipper-like ridge that extends the entire length of the ray. The ridge is composed of rows of ossicles, or skeletal plates, which are embedded in the soft body wall. These plates make up the endoskeleton, or inner skeleton, of a starfish. This meshwork of plates also gives rigidity to the body of the starfish and protection to the tube feet while allowing the rays to bend and twist.
3. Examine the cross section which shows how the lateral canals connect the tube feet to the radial canal. This radial canal runs the complete length of each ray. Radial canals are very small and they are not visible in the preserved specimen unless the specimen has been specially injected with dye. Water moves from the madreporite to the ring canal (neither shown here) to the radial canal to the lateral canals which then fill the ampullae. The water stored in the ampullae is used to move the tube feet up and down.
Cross sectional view of a ray
2.

Draw a line connecting the structure in the cross-sectional view of the ray with its name:
1) coelom 2) ampulla 3) tube feet 4) sucker 5) ossicles 6) spines

Cutting lines
Removing the skin on the rays...
When dissecting the starfish, you will be uncovering layer by layer the various systems in the starfish.

1. First you will cut up the sides of the rays and then across to pull up the skin. This is a difficult task. Be careful to try and not damage the internal structures of the starfish while you are cutting up the sides. When pulling up the skin, use a probe or tweezers to separate the skin from the internal structures. It is best to use a pair of pointed scissors.

Why aren't we using a scalpel or razor? Using a scalpel or razor causes too much damage to the internal structures when pressure is pushed down on the skin in the process of cutting it.

2. After you have the skin off of the tops of the rays, the next step is to cut the skin off of the central disc keeping the madreporite in tact and carefully lifting the skin so the internal organs are not damaged. The easiest way is to do this is to slowly cut little pie-shaped wedges off until you get all of the skin removed from the central disk.

3. Order of internal observations and identifications: 1st layer is the Digestive System; 2nd layer is the Sexual Reproductive System, and the 3rd layer is the Skeletal and Water-Vascular System

Watch the following video as a PREVIEW of what you will be doing. It is helpful so you will have an idea of what you are looking for with each layer of dissection. Do not follow the directions in the video as you are watching it. You will follow the written directions that follow this Content Box.


Digestive System pictures to use for identificaion
Digestive System in a Starfish

Observe that most of the space in the ray is occupied by the pyloric caeca, two long digestive glands. Each ray contains caeca, or pouches. (They are usually some shade of brown and look feathery.) The ducts, or tubes, carry enzymes form the caeca to the stomach.
Observe the stomach under the central disc. Locate the duct leading to the pyloric caeca.
Locate the short tubular intestine that extends from the stomach to the anus in the middle of the central disc. Sometimes this gets damaged while removing the flap covering the central disk.
Attached to one side of the intestine is a two-or-three branched intestinal caeca. Some or all of these, the intestine, anus, and intestinal caeca, may not be distinguishable in your specimen.
Starfish have two stomachs; the cardiac stomach, and the pyloric stomach. The cardiac is a sack-like stomach found in the center of the body. It can be pushed out of the starfish's body and used to engulf food. Some starfish force open mollusks (clams) by injecting their stomachs into the shells. With the stomach inside, the starfish digests the mollusk in the shell. The pyloric stomach is connected by two pyloric caeca- hollow tubes that absorbs nutrients from its food. The pyloric stomach is closest to the aboral side of the starfish and is on top of the cardiac stomach which is directly over the mouth on the ventral side of the starfish. Starfish eat many things, like barnacles, snails, sea urchins, clams, and mussels.
3.

First: draw connecting lines from these structures to their names in the picture:
1) pyloric caeca, 2) pyloric duct, 3) pyloric stomach, 4) cardiac stomach, and 5) anus

Second: Locate the pyloric caeca in one of the rays. Raise your hand and wait for the teacher to come and confirm your identification.

4.

The starfish has two stomachs.

5.

The mouth is located on the dorsal side of the starfish.

6.

Looking at the starfish from the dorsal side, the mouth is on top of the stomach.

7.

The anus is located in the central disk on the dorsal side of the starfish.

8.

Looking at the starfish from the dorsal side, the anus is under the stomachs.

9.

There are two sets of pyloric calea and two pyloric ducts in each ray.

Sexual Reproductive System - Locating the Gonads
Sexual Reproductive System in the Starfish

Carefully and gently remove the entire pyloric caeca from the dissected ray of the starfish.
Locate the gonads under the pyloric caeca. Especially in preserved specimens, it is difficult to recognize the gonads because they are only a slightly different shade of brown and texture compared to the pyloric caeca.
The gonads are usually small except during the spawning season. There is one pair of gonads in each ray. The ovaries are orange and the testes are gray in living specimens. The gonads in preserved specimens may lose their true color.
10.

Select the correct name for each of the structures shown in the picture and put the correct number next to the list of structures (3, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9).

11.

How many gonad pairs are in the starfish species you dissected?

enter a number
12.

Try to determine the sex of your specimen.

13.

Speculate on whether your specimen was collected during the spawning season.

A couple of views of the Water Vascular System in the Starfish
Water-Vascular System

Carefully remove the gonads from the ray of your starfish. Also, remove any of the digestive system that hasn't been removed in the ray and the central disc. Be careful to keep the madreporite attached.
The water vascular system of the starfish consists of a series of seawater filled ducts that function in locomotion and feeding. The system provides the water pressure that operates the animal's tube feet.
1. Water enters and leaves the system through the madreporite which is connected to a circular ring canal by the stone canal. 2. The water is then distributed to the radial canals that pass into each of the rays. 3. Lining the ridge through which each radial canal passes is a double row of bulb-like structures called ampullae. 4. The ampullae are connected by lateral canals. 5. The ampullae are connected to the tube feet which project from the ambulacral groove on the ventral surface of each ray.
Water from the radial canal collects in the ampullae. Contraction of the ampullae causes the tube feet to elongate as water is forced into them. Expansion of the ampullae results in shortening the tube feet. The canals are like a network of water pipes attached to the tube feet. Thus, through the use of small suction discs at the end of each tube foot and the alternate expansion and contraction of the ampullae, the starfish is able to move.
14.

Demonstrate your understanding of the water vascular system by drawing one red line starting at the madreporite and showing its route to just one of the tube feet. Connect the structures listed for the water vascular system to their location in the starfish by connecting them with a line.

to draw a red line click on the red dot on the right hand side and then click the pencil icon
15.

What happens to the direction of the flow of water when the tube feet contract?

contract means moving backward
16.

The suckers on the end of the tube feet can attach to a clam shell and slowly pry it open.

Starfish have an endoskeleton made of ossicles
Skeletal System in Starfish
Now everything should be removed from the ray of the starfish allowing you to observe the skeletal plates.

Starfish have mesodermal endoskeleton (endo- meaning the skeleton is inside) with small calcareous ossicles (bony plates). Their bones are very flexible, allowing them to move around freely. Ossicles in the skin provide support, protection from predators, and wave action allowing the starfish to move all directions.
Application - pictures for Questions 17 and 18
17.

Look at the three specimens in the picture above. These skeletons of animals were found in the ocean and brought back to a lab for further study. Most likely ______________________ is/are echinoderms?

18.

Provide a reason for the answer you selected in Question 17.

Cladogram of Echinoderms: use it to answer Questions 19 and 20
19.

Study the cladogram above for Echinoderms. The cladogram indicates that ________________________ are closely related.

20.

Study the cladogram above for echinoderms. The cladogram indicates that crinoids

21.

Describe the most interesting thing you learned about starfish during this lab. Write in complete sentences.

Starfish Review for Parts 1, 2, and 3 - This video was available to you earlier, so you don't have to re-watch it if you don't need to review the information.