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How do invertebrates move around? affVideo("polar seastar on the move", "31etoilepolaire.mov", "Actual time: 24 minutes", "390 Ko", "250", "175");?> Polar seastar on the move Tube feet This seastar has four rows of small tube feet under each arm. Moving A seastar gets around by moving its suction feet. affVideo("a waved whelk on the move", "31buccin.mov", "Actual time: 7 minutes", "297 Ko", "250", "152");?> A waved whelk on the move Operculum A waved whelk is a marine snail. The brown disk on its back is called an operculum. The whelk uses it to close off its shell and protect itself. Foot The muscles in its foot contract in waves, allowing it to glide along the film of transparent mucus that it secretes. Tentacles It uses its tentacles and eyes to explore its environment, and its siphon to breathe and detect odours. affVideo("a sand dollar on the move", "31dollar.mov", "Actual time: 19 minutes", "449 Ko", "172", "136");?> A sand dollar on the move Feet It uses the five rows of tube feet arranged in a star under its body to move about and burrow into the bottom to hide. Burrowing Sand dollars are hard to spot. They spend most of their time buried in the sand on the bottom, where they find food and shelter. affVideo("a sea cucumber on the move", "31concombre.mov", "Actual time: 1 hour, 7 minutes", "733 Ko", "218", "239");?> A sea cucumber on the move That’s no vegetable! A sea cucumber is not a vegetable, but a slow-moving marine animal. Tube feet It uses its tube feet to move around and anchor itself. Note how it contracts its body to help it move. This sea cucumber is climbing up the wall of an aquarium, so you can see its four rows of tubular suction feet. affVideo("a northern sea anemone on the move", "31anemone.mov", "Actual time: 1 hour, 10 minutes", "516 Ko", "205", "219");?> A northern sea anemone on the move Animal or flower? A northern sea anemone is an animal that looks like a large flower. Tubular body It has a series of vertical muscles that allow it to bend in every direction. Pedal disk To move, it stretches one side of its pedal disk and then contracts it. This shifts its centre of gravity in that direction. Drifting It can also drift with the current and attach itself wherever the current takes it.. affVideo("a blood seastar on the move", "31etoilesanguignolante.mov", "Actual time: 33 minutes", "535 Ko", "248", "212");?> A blood seastar on the move Exploring Do you see how this tiny seastar moves about to explore its environment?. For more information For more information and to see how it is able to move so far, take a look at its larger cousin, the polar seastar, on the move. affVideo("a green sea urchin on the move", "31oursin.mov", "Actual time: 32 minutes", "746 Ko", "200", "109");?> A green sea urchin on the move Spines The spines on a sea urchin’s body, some of them short and some long, are able to move. Pieds Cinq doubles rangées de pieds « ambulacraires » lui permettent de se déplacer. Feet It contracts and expands its five double rows of tube feet to move around. affVideo("a spider crab on the move", "31crabe.mov", "Actual time: 7 seconds", "630 Ko", "320", "240");?> A spider crab on the move How many legs? Like most crabs, a spider crab doesn’t swim, but uses its eight legs to move quickly across the bottom. Pincers Its pincers are modified legs that also help it get around. Sideways movement It tends to move sideways because of the shape and hardness of its shell and the arrangement of its legs.
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