Sea cucumber


Sea cucumbers are echinoderms from the class Holothuroidea (/ˌhɒləˌθjʊəˈrɔɪdi.ə,ˌh-/ ). They are marine animals with a leathery skin and an elongated body containing a single, branched gonad. Sea cucumbers are found on the sea floor worldwide. The number of holothurian (/ˌhɒləˈθjʊəri.ən,ˌh-/ )[1][2] species worldwide is about 1,717,[3] with the greatest number being in the Asia-Pacific region.[4] Many of these are gathered for human consumption and some species are cultivated in aquaculture systems. The harvested product is variously referred to as trepang, namako, bêche-de-mer, or balate. Sea cucumbers serve a useful role in the marine ecosystem as they help recycle nutrients, breaking down detritus and other organic matter, after which bacteria can continue the decomposition process.[4]

Like all echinoderms, sea cucumbers have an endoskeleton just below the skin, calcified structures that are usually reduced to isolated microscopic ossicles (or sclerietes) joined by connective tissue. In some species these can sometimes be enlarged to flattened plates, forming an armour. In pelagic species such as Pelagothuria natatrix (order Elasipodida, family Pelagothuriidae), the skeleton is absent and there is no calcareous ring.[5]

Most sea cucumbers, as their name suggests, have a soft and cylindrical body, more or less lengthened, rounded off and occasionally fat in the extremities, and generally without solid appendages. Their shape ranges from almost spherical for "sea apples" (genus Pseudocolochirus) to serpent-like for Apodida or the classic sausage-shape, while others resemble caterpillars. The mouth is surrounded by tentacles, which can be pulled back inside the animal.[6] Holothurians measure generally between 10 and 30 centimetres long, with extremes of some millimetres for Rhabdomolgus ruber and up to more than 3 metres for Synapta maculata. The largest American species, Holothuria floridana, which abounds just below low-water mark on the Florida reefs, has a volume of well over 500 cubic centimeters (31 cu in),[7] and 25–30 cm (10–12 in) long. Most possess five rows of tube feet (called "podia"), but Apodida lacks these and moves by crawling; the podia can be of smooth aspect or provided with fleshy appendages (like Thelenota ananas). The podia on the dorsal surface generally have no locomotive role, and are transformed into papillae. At one of the extremities opens a rounded mouth, generally surrounded with a crown of tentacles which can be very complex in some species (they are in fact modified podia); the anus is postero-dorsal.

Holothurians do not look like other echinoderms at first glance, because of their tubular body, without visible skeleton nor hard appendixes. Furthermore, the fivefold symmetry, classical for echinoderms, although preserved structurally, is doubled here by a bilateral symmetry which makes them look like chordates. However, a central symmetry is still visible in some species through five 'radii', which extend from the mouth to the anus (just like for sea urchins), on which the tube feet are attached. There is thus no "oral" or "aboral" face as for sea stars and other echinoderms, but the animal stands on one of its sides, and this face is called trivium (with three rows of tube feet), while the dorsal face is named bivium. A remarkable feature of these animals is the "catch" collagen that forms their body wall.[Notes 1] This can be loosened and tightened at will, and if the animal wants to squeeze through a small gap, it can essentially liquefy its body and pour into the space. To keep itself safe in these crevices and cracks, the sea cucumber will hook up all its collagen fibers to make its body firm again.[8]


Thelenota ananas, a giant sea cucumber from the Indo-Pacific tropics
Sea cucumber : a -Tentacles, b - Cloaca, c - Ambulacral feet on the ventral side, d -Papillae on the back
Conspicuous Sea Cucumber, Coconut Island, Hawaii
A sea cucumber atop gravel, feeding
Sea cucumber ossicles (here "wheels" and "anchors")
The mysterious Pelagothuria natatrix is the only truly pelagic echinoderm known to date.
Benthopelagic sea cucumbers, such as this Enypniastes, are often confused with jellyfish, have webbed swimming structures enabling them to swim up off the surface of the seafloor and journey as much as 1,000 m (3,300 ft) up the water column
Spanish dancer (Benthodytes sp.), another swimming sea cucumber, hovering at 2789 meters by the Davidson Seamount
"Auricularia" larva (by Ernst Haeckel)
Emperor shrimp Periclimenes imperator on a Bohadschia ocellata sea cucumber
Tonna perdix, a selective predator of tropical sea cucumbers
A sea cucumber in Mahé, Seychelles ejects sticky filaments from the anus in self-defense.
Apodida like this Euapta godeffroyi are snake-shaped, without podia, and have pinnate tentacles.
Holothuriida like this Holothuria cinerascens are sausage-shaped, with peltate tentacles.
Dendrochirotida like this Cercodemas anceps are curled-bodied and have arborescent tentacles.
Elasipodida like this "sea pig" Scotoplanes have a translucent body with specific appendages; they live in the abyss.
Synallactida like this Stichopus herrmanni still lack a definition.
Dried sea cucumbers in a Japanese pharmacy
Holothurians plate by Ernst Haeckel from his Kunstformen der Natur (1904)