6/8/2006 - Fiji Faithful #1 - Linckia laevigata, 1758

Blue Sea Star.
These are amongst the most photgraphed and better known of Fiji's marine creatures and, as

their common name suggests, are, er, blue sea stars. They graze on shallow reefs, spewing

out their stomach linings in order to access hard-to-reach food, before sucking them back in

to digest. So, contrary to what you might think, even though they appear motionless they are

not dead. They are in fact alive, well and feeding.

 

 

Keen-eyed Gogglers may also spot the less common Linckia guildingi, or Green Sea Star and

those that venture out at night may even spot the much larger Tamaria stria, or Red Sea

Star, both of which are almost identical to the Blue Sea Star in appearance although

slightly different in size and, er, colour. Also resident on Fiji's reefs are the smaller

Linckia multifora, which are pretty red and white speckled sea stars, with one blue splot on

the tip of each their legs.

 

If you pick any of these sea stars up and turn them over quickly enough you may just catch their hundreds of tiny, tubular, suction-cupped feet retracting into their legs and their stomach retracting into their central cavity. Although hard and fairly solid to the touch sea stars are capable of some spectacular contortion and you will often see a couple of legs sticking out from a small crevice or wrapping round an outcropping to maneouvre the stomach opening into place.

 

 

If you do pick one up then please put it back exactly where you found it. Many people think they look nice when used as wall decorations. I personally think they look much nicer in the sea and besides, you wouldn't pick a stray puppy from the side of the road and pin it to you wall, so how is a sea star any different? Also remember that if you place one in your suitcase and try to smuggle it away that it will make your entire bag stink within a very short time.

 

True story: What happens if you chop the leg off a starfish?
Answer 1: The starfish grows a new leg.
Answer 2: The leg grows a new starfish.

 

 
Post A Comment!

6/8/2006 - What a star

Posted by Lissa
You don't expect an animal to be that colour: plants maybe, but not animals. Such a beautiful blue, but better on the sea bed than my wall.

There was a programme in the Grand Designs series where someone had built a house partly beside and partly over a Scottish loch and had included a living wall dividing kitchen and living room consisting of a massive aquarium of tropical fish. Admittedly the fish are alive, but that does seem to be treating them as mere decorative objects rather than living creatures.
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