Cinctans were asymmetrical animals, though some species were nearly bilaterally symmetrical. Like all echinoderms, cinctans have a skeleton made of plates of
stereom. The body of cinctans was divided into two sections, the main body, called the theca, and a posterior appendage called a stele. The overall shape of cinctans has been compared to a tennis racquet. The theca of cinctans was surrounded on its margins by a frame of large stereom plates called a cinctus, and the dorsal and ventral surfaces were covered in a tessellated arrangement of small plates. The stele was essentially an extension of the cinctus, rather than a discrete appendage, and would have been fairly stiff side-to-side but possibly more flexible up and down. The stele was not a holdfast, but may have served to stabilize the animal. In most cinctans, the overall shape of the theca was only mildly asymmetrical, but in the unusual genus
Lignanicystis the theca was highly asymmetrical, convergent on the
stylophorans in some respects. The species
Graciacystis could reach a theca length of . The theca of cinctans contained three major openings. The mouth was located on the right side of the anterior end, in the cinctus, and was associated with marginal grooves. All species had a left marginal groove, but the right marginal groove was sometimes absent and always shorter than the left one. The anus was located near the anterior end, on the right side, indicating that the gut was U-shaped. It was surrounded by a cone of plates equivalent to the
periproct of modern echinoderms. The largest opening, called the porta, was located at the anterior end and was covered by an operculum. It was likely an atrial opening like that of tunicates. The asymmetry of the marginal groove likely indicates that cinctans had a
water vascular system comprising two hydrocoels, with the left hydrocoel larger than the right. In species with only a left marginal groove, the right hydrocoel may have been absent as in modern echinoderms. ==Biology==