Sea urchins are established in most
benthic habitats from the
intertidal downwards, at an extremely wide range of depths. Many genera are found in only the
abyssal zone, including many
cidaroids, most of the genera in the
Echinothuriidae family, and the "cactus urchins"
Dermechinus. Some species, such as
Cidaris abyssicola, can live at depths of several kilometres, and one of the deepest-living families is the
Pourtalesiidae, strange bottle-shaped irregular sea urchins that live in only the
hadal zone and have been collected as deep as beneath the surface in the
Sunda Trench. Compared to other classes of echinoderms, sea urchins inhabit more shallow depths compared to
brittle stars,
starfish, and
crinoids that remain abundant below and
sea cucumbers which have been recorded from . Even in these kelp barrens, greatest densities are found in shallow water. Populations are generally found in deeper water if wave action is present. Sea urchins can be found in all climates, from warm seas to polar oceans. Despite their presence in nearly all the marine ecosystems, most species are found on temperate and tropical coasts, between the surface and some tens of meters deep, close to
photosynthetic food sources. Adult sea urchins are usually well protected against most predators by their strong and sharp spines, which can be venomous in some species. The small
urchin clingfish lives among the spines of urchins such as
Diadema; juveniles feed on the pedicellariae and sphaeridia, adult males choose the tube feet and adult females move away to feed on shrimp eggs and molluscs. Sea urchins are one of the favourite foods of
lobsters,
crabs,
triggerfish,
California sheephead,
sea otter, and
wolf eels (which specialise in sea urchins). All these animals carry particular adaptations (teeth, pincers, claws) and a strength that allow them to overcome the excellent protective features of sea urchins. File:Wolf eel eating a sea urchin.jpg|
Wolf eels specialize in eating sea urchins File:Sea otter with sea urchin.jpg|A
sea otter feeding on a
purple sea urchin File:Carpilius convexus is consuming Heterocentrotus trigonarius in Hawaii.jpg|A
marbled stone crab attacking a
slate pencil sea urchin File:Saddle Wrasse are feeding on sea urchin in Kona.jpg|A
saddle wrasse finishing the remains of a damaged
Tripneustes gratilla Anti-predator defences is a dangerous, potentially lethally venomous species. The
spines, long and sharp in some species, protect the urchin from
predators. Some tropical sea urchins, like
Diadematidae,
Echinothuriidae and
Toxopneustidae, have venomous spines. Other creatures also make use of these defences; crabs, shrimps and other organisms shelter among the spines, and often adopt the colouring of their host. Some crabs in the
Dorippidae family carry sea urchins, starfish, sharp shells or other protective objects in their claws.
Pedicellariae are a good means of defense against ectoparasites, but not a panacea as some of them actually feed on it. The hemal system defends against endoparasites.
Urchin barrens Left unchecked by predators, urchins devastate their environments, creating what biologists call an
urchin barren, devoid of
macroalgae and associated
fauna. Sea urchins graze on the lower stems of kelp, causing the kelp to drift away and die. Loss of the habitat and nutrients provided by
kelp forests leads to profound
cascade effects on the marine ecosystem. The return of predators such as sea otters may reverse this process, promoting kelp regrowth and dramatically improving coastal ecosystem health. The shift to urchin barrens may be better characterized as a "compositional redistribution", where change is observed in the species present in certain locales of a region, but the species extirpated in these locales remain present in other parts of the region. Compared to urchin barrens, kelp forests deliver more
ecosystem services, such as
biodiversity,
species richness,
abalone abundance, and sea urchin roe quality. Urchin barrens replace kelp forests, thus they occur in places where kelp are native, such as off the coast of the contiguous United States, Canada, the
Aleutians, Chile, Europe's Atlantic coastline, Greece, Australia, Japan, and the
Russian Far East. Contrary to what the name suggests, urchin barrens host invertebrates species other than sea urchins, such as sea stars, brittle stars, and mussels, along with
coralline algae encrusting the substrate, which replace fleshy and
filamentous algae. Regardless, these barrens are characterized by the dominance of sea urchins and coralline algae. Sea urchin mass mortality events may cause the rapid return of a kelp forest, as was observed in the
Southern California Bight, where the ecosystem returned to a "kelp-dominated state" within 6 months of a disease outbreak. Targeted culling of sea urchins, where divers kill purple sea urchins with small hammers, may aid this process.
Disease Mass mortality of sea urchins was first reported in the 1970s, but diseases in sea urchins had been little studied before the advent of aquaculture. In 1981, bacterial "spotting disease" caused almost complete mortality in juvenile
Pseudocentrotus depressus and
Hemicentrotus pulcherrimus, both cultivated in Japan; the disease recurred in succeeding years. It was divided into a cool-water "spring" disease and a hot-water "summer" form. Another condition,
bald sea urchin disease, causes loss of spines and skin lesions and is believed to be bacterial in origin. == Evolution ==