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Archive 1288: Daily Pix FULL SIZE
(For personal use only: NOT public domain)
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Parribacus antarcticus, the Sculptured Slipper Lobster. Circumtropical but mainly caught out of the tropical West Atlantic for aquarium use. Nocturnal, and wary of humans. Capable of great bursts of strength, speed in swimming backward. One out at night off of Hawai'i's Big Island.
 

All members of the phylum Echinodermata are readily distinguished by:
1) The presence of a water-vascular system (tube feet) used in locomotion and food manipulation. Pictured is a close-up of an Urchin, Tripneustes ventricosus, in the shallows of Belize, showing its defensive and manipulating tube feet. And a close-up of the five-rowed arms of a Seastar at S.I.O.'s Birch Aquarium.



All members of the phylum Echinodermata are readily distinguished by:
1) The presence of a water-vascular system (tube feet) used in locomotion and food manipulation. Pictured is a close-up of an Urchin, Tripneustes ventricosus, in the shallows of Belize, showing its defensive and manipulating tube feet. And a close-up of the five-rowed arms of a Seastar at S.I.O.'s Birch Aquarium.
 

All members of the phylum Echinodermata are readily distinguished by:
2) A sub-epidermal (internal) microstructured calcareous skeleton. A close up of the surface of a Batstar, Patiria miniata reveals interlocking elements.
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