Most starfish have five arms that radiate from a central disc, but the number varies with the group. Some species have six or seven arms and others have 10–15 arms. In Antarctic
Labidiaster annulatus, the number of arms can exceed fifty. Evidence from
gene expression finds that the starfish body corresponds to a head externally (with lips attached to the tube feet) and a
torso internally. Starfish possess two
vascular systems, one for transport of water to support locomotion and other functions, and another for circulation of blood.
Body wall The body wall layers include a thin
cuticle covering, an
epidermis consisting of a single layer of cells, a thick
dermis formed of
connective tissue, a thin
coelomic
myoepithelial layer for the muscles, and a
peritoneum which lines the body cavity. The dermis contains an
endoskeleton of
calcium carbonate components known as ossicles. These are honeycomb-like structures composed of
calcite microcrystals arranged in a lattice. They vary in form, from flat plates to granules to spines, and cover the aboral (top) surface. Some are specialised structures such as the
madreporite (the entrance to the water vascular system),
pedicellariae, and
paxillae. Paxillae are umbrella-like structures found on starfish that live buried in substrate. The edges of adjacent paxillae meet to form a false cuticle with a water cavity beneath in which the madreporite and delicate gill structures are protected. The ossicles are located under the epidermal layer, even those emerging externally. Some species like
Labidiaster annulatus and
Novodinia antillensis use their pedicellariae to catch prey. There may also be
papulae, thin-walled protrusions of the body cavity that reach through the body wall into the surrounding water. These serve a
respiratory function. The structures are supported by collagen fibres set at right angles to each other and arranged in a three-dimensional web with the ossicles and papulae in the
interstices. This arrangement enables both easy flexion of the arms and the rapid onset of stiffness and rigidity required for some actions performed under stress. File:Luidia maculata, Ras Sedr, Egypt.jpg|
Luidia maculata, a seven armed starfish File:Astropecten aranciacus Naxos08 1775 dett.jpg|
Astropecten aranciacus ossicles File:Pédicellaires d' Acanthaster Planci.JPG|Pedicellariae and retracted papulae among the spines of
Acanthaster planci File:Asterias forbesi pedicellaria and papulae.jpg|Pedicellaria and papulae of
Asterias forbesi Water vascular system The water
vascular system of the starfish is a
hydraulic system made up of a network of fluid-filled canals and is concerned with locomotion, adhesion, food manipulation and
gas exchange. Water enters the system through the
madreporite, a porous, often conspicuous, sieve-like ossicle on the aboral surface. It is linked through a
calcareous-lined canal called the stone canal, to a ring canal around the mouth opening. A set of radial canals branch off from the ring canal; one radial canal runs along the
ambulacral groove in each arm. There are short lateral canals branching off alternately to either side of the radial canal, each ending in an ampulla. These bulb-shaped organs are joined to tube feet (podia) on the exterior of the animal by short linking canals that pass through ossicles in the ambulacral groove. There are usually two rows of tube feet but in some species, the lateral canals are alternately long and short and there appear to be four rows. The interior of the whole canal system is lined with
cilia. Water is pushed into the tube face when longitudinal muscles in the ampullae contract, and shut the valves in the lateral canals. This causes the tube feet to stretch and touch the
substrate. Other chemicals and relaxation of the ampullae allow for release from the substrate. The tube feet latch on to surfaces and move in a wave, with one arm section attaching to the surface as another releases. To expose the sensory tube feet and the eyespot to external stimuli, some starfish turn up the tips of their arms while moving. Having descended from
bilateral organisms, starfish may move in a bilateral fashion, particularly when hunting or threatened. When crawling, certain arms act as the leading arms, while others trail behind. When a starfish finds itself upside down, two adjacent arms and an opposite arm press against the ground to lift up the two remaining arms; the opposite arm leaves the ground as the starfish turns over and recovers its normal stance. Apart from their function in locomotion, the tube feet act as accessory gills. The water vascular system serves to transport
oxygen from, and carbon dioxide to, the tube feet and nutrients from the gut to the muscles involved in locomotion. Fluid movement is bidirectional and initiated by cilia. Primitive starfish, such as
Astropecten and
Luidia, swallow their
prey whole, and start to digest it in their cardial stomachs, spitting out hard material like shells. The semi-digested fluid flows into the caeca for more digestion as well as absorption. The main nitrogenous waste product is
ammonia, which is removed via
diffusion through the tube feet, papulae and other thin-walled areas. Other waste material include
urates. The body fluid contains
phagocytic cells called
coelomocytes, which are also found within the hemal and water vascular systems. These cells engulf waste material, and eventually migrate to the tips of the papulae, where a portion of body wall is nipped off and ejected into the surrounding water. Starfish keep their body fluids at the same salt concentration as the surrounding water, the lack of an osmoregulation system probably explains why starfish are not found in fresh water and rarely in
estuarine environments. While a starfish lacks a
centralized brain, it has a complex
nervous system with a nerve ring around the mouth and a radial nerve running along the ambulacral region of each arm parallel to the radial canal. The peripheral nerve system consists of two nerve nets: one in the epidermis and the other in the lining of the coelomic cavity, which are the sensory and motor systems respectively. Neurons passing through the dermis join the two. Both the ring and radial nerves function in movement and sensory. The sensory component is supplied with information from the sensory organs while the motor nerves control the tube feet and musculature. If one arm detects something attractive, it becomes dominant and temporarily over-rides the other arms to initiate movement towards it. Research into the efficacy of these compounds for possible pharmacological or industrial use occurs worldwide. ==Life cycle==