Tuesday 23 January 2018

Water Vascular System of Starfish


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Water Vascular System

Introduction:-

The water vascular system is a modified part of coelom & consists of a system of seawater filled
canals having certain corpuscles. It plays most vital role in the locomotion of the animals &
comprises madreporite stone canal, ring canal, radial canal, Tiedman's body, lateral canals & tube
feet.


(1) Madreporite :-

The madreporite is a rounded calcareous plate occurring on the aboral surface of the central disc in
inter-radial position. Its surface bears a number of radiating, narrow, straight or wavy grooves or
furrows. Each furrow contains many minute pores at its bottom. Each pore leads into a very short,
fine, tubular pore-canal. Which passes inward in the substance of the madreporite. There may be
about 200 pores and pore-canal. The pore-canals unite to form the collecting canals. Which open
into an ampulla beneath the madreporite

(2) Stone Canal :-

The ampulla opens into a "S" shaped stone canal. The stone canal extends downwards (orally) and
opens into a ring canal, around the mouth. The walls of stone canal are supported by a series of
calcareous ringd. The lumen of stone canal is lined by very tall flagellated cells. in embryonic stages
and young Asterias, the stone canal remains a simple tube but in adult Asterias, lumen of stone
canal possesses a prominent ridge with two spirally rolled lamellae.


(3) Ring Canal :-

The Ring canal or water ring is located to the inner side of the peristomial ring of ossicles and
directly above (aboral) to the hyponeural ring sinus. It is wide and pentagonal or five-sided.

WVS

(4) Tiedmann's Bodies :-

The ring canal gives out inter radially nine small, yellowish, irregular or rounded glandular bodies
called racemose or Tiedmann's bodies from its inner margins. The Tiedmann's body rest upon the
peristomial ring of ossicles. The actual function of tiedmann's bodies is still unknown, however they
are supposed to be lymphatic glands to manufacture the amoebocytes of the water vascular system.

(5) Pollian Vesicles :-

The ring canal gives off on its outer side in the inter radial position one, two or four little, pear
shaped, thin walled contractile bladder or reservoirs with long necks called pollian vesicles. They are
supposed to regulate pressure inside ambulacral system and to manufacture amoeboid cells of
ambulacral system.

(6) Radial Canal :-

From its outer surface the ring canal gives off a radial water canal into each arm that runs throughout
the length of the arm and terminates as the lumen of terminal tentacle. In the arm the radial water
canal runs immediately to the oral side of the ambulacral muscles.


(7) Lateral Canal :-

In each arm, the radial canal gives out two series of short, narrow, transverse branches called lateral
or podial canals. Each lateral canal is attached to the base of a tube foot and its provided with a
valve to prevent backward flow of fluid into the radial canal.


(8) Tube feet :-

As already mentioned, there are four rows of tube feet in each ambulacral groove. A tube foot is a
hollow. elastic, thin walled, closed cylinder or sac-like structure having an upper sac like ampulla, a
middle tubular podium & a lower disc like sucker. The ampulla lies within the arm, projecting into the
coelom above the ambulacral pore which is a gap between the adjacent ambulacral ossicles for the
passage of the podium. The tube feet are chief locomotory and respiratory organ of Asterias.



                -:Function of Water Vascular System :-

The water vascular system has three main functions. They are as follows-


(1) Locomotion :-

The water vascular system is used mainly for locomotion. The inner wall of the water vascular canals
are provided with cilia. The beating of the cilia causes the seawater to enter through the madreporite.
Finally, the seawater reaches the tube feet and their ampullae.
The ampullae contract ; the valves at the junction of the lateral canals and tube feet, prevent the flow
of water into radial canals.
The water is forced into the podia. The podia are elongated and protected out through the
ambulacral groove. Then the suckers are applied to the substratum.
The tube feet now contract & push the body forward. The water from the tube feet is pushed into the
ampulla. Hence, the tube feet shorten. The suckers are released. Then the ampulla contracts & the
whole process is repeated.

(2) Food Capture :-

The tube feet are used to capture the prey.


(3) Attachment :-

The Starfish can be attached to the rocks by the tube feet.

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