'' from East Timor Like other echinoderms, adult comatulids have
pentamerous (five-sided) symmetry, while the larvae have
bilateral symmetry. Late in their development, the larvae are attached to the seabed by a stalk, but during
metamorphosis the juvenile crinoids detach and are free living. The body has an endoskeleton made from a number of articulated calcareous plates known as ossicles, covered by a thin epidermis. Shaped like a cup (the calyx) with a lid (the tegmen), it has a central mouth and an anus near the edge, connected by a U-shaped gut. There is a ring of clawlike appendages (the
cirri) near the base of the aboral underside; these grip the
substrate to keep the feather star in place. There are five long, often branched, rays attached round the edge of the tegmen. Each of these is further subdivided into
branchlets (the pinnules). Most comatulids originally have 10 arms, each ray being subdivided once. The arms are fragile, and if one is broken off, at least two grow in its place; in this way the number of arms can increase. The arms are composed of articulating ossicles held together by ligaments, and the pinnules have a similar structure. The arms are very flexible and can be spread widely or coiled up. An
ambulacral groove starts on each pinnule and joins with others to form grooves on the arms all leading to grooves on the tegmen ending at the mouth. These food-collecting grooves are overhung by calcareous plates (the lappets) and have a lining of fine cilia. ==Behavior==