Puneet Varma (Editor)

Ophiocoma wendtii

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Family
  
Ophiocomidae

Scientific name
  
Ophiocoma wendtii

Higher classification
  
Ophiocoma

Order
  
Ophiurida

Suborder
  
Chilophiurina

Genus
  
Ophiocoma

Phylum
  
Echinodermata

Rank
  
Species

Subclass
  
Brittle star

Ophiocoma wendtii wwwnprorgprogramsatcfeatures2001aug010822

Similar
  
Ophiocoma, Brittle star, Ophiocoma echinata, Ophiocomidae, Ophiopsila

The brittle star Ophiocoma wendtii inhabits coral reefs from Bermuda to Brazil. It is known for its advanced compound eyes.

Brittle stars have long, thin arms emanating from a small, disk-shaped body and are about the size of an outstretched human hand. They belong to the phylum of echinoderms, which includes sea urchins, sea cucumbers, and sea stars.

Visual system

Its arms are covered with calcite crystals. In addition to functioning as an armor and giving structural support, the crystals make up its unique visual systems. They minimize spherical aberration and can detect the direction of incoming light. The lenses work by filtering and focusing light on an underlying photoreceptor system. Nerve bundles under each lens, presumed to be light-sensitive, transmit the optical information to the rest of the nervous system.

The only known animals to employ a similar visual system were the now-extinct trilobites. Phototropic chromatophores can change O. wendtii's color and regulate how much light will reach the photoreceptors.

References

Ophiocoma wendtii Wikipedia