Friday, January 20, 2012

Good things come to those...

Who have Prime 2-day shipping from Amazon!





Unfortunately, while I got the heavy-bag on Prime it's too heavy for the 2-day shipping so it won't be coming until Wednesday next week. Guess I really will have to beat up Typhoid-Poppy. Yeah, that's right, she's home sick. Nice rainy weekend to be sick. Football and movies, I'm thinking.

Speaking of As-Seen-In-Its-Real-Habitat-Poppy...she's been collecting those sand dollar things from the beach. Now she's put them in the front garden as they would naturally appear if they were alive in the ocean.



See, right there next our sea cactus.

So I did a little sand dollar research on Know-It-all-Wikipedia. Pretty interesting junk...

The term Sand dollar (or sea cookie or snapper biscuit in New Zealand, or pansy shell in South Africa) refers to species of extremely flattened, burrowing echinoids belonging to the order Clypeasteroida. Some species within the order, not quite as flat, are known as sea biscuits. Related creatures include the sea urchins, sea cucumbers and starfish.

Sand dollars, like all members of the order Clypeasteroida, possess a rigid skeleton known as a test. The test consists of calcium carbonate plates arranged in a fivefold radial pattern. In living individuals the test is covered by a skin of velvet-textured spines; these spines are in turn covered with very small hairs (cilia). Coordinated movements of the spines enable sand dollars to move across the seabed. The velvety spines of live sand dollars appear in a variety of colours—green, blue, violet, purple—depending on the species. The tests of dead individuals are often found on beaches, the textured skin missing and the skeleton bleached white by sunlight.

The bodies of adult sand dollars, like those of other echinoids, display radial symmetry. The petal-like pattern in sand dollars consists of five paired rows of pores. The pores are perforations in the endoskeleton through which podia for gas exchange project from the body. The mouth of the sand dollar is located on the bottom of its body at the center of the petal-like pattern. Unlike other urchins, the bodies of sand dollars also display secondary front-to-back bilateral symmetry. The anus of sand dollars is located at the back rather than at the top as in most urchins, with many more bilateral features appearing in some species. These result from the adaptation of sand dollars, in the course of their evolution, from creatures that originally lived their lives on top of the seabed (epibenthos) to creatures that burrow beneath it (hyperbenthos).

The Common Sand Dollar, Echinarachnius parma, is widespread in ocean waters of the Northern Hemisphere, from the intertidal zone to considerable depths. It can be found in temperate and tropical zones. The Keyhole Sand Dollar (three species, genus Mellita) is found on a wide range of coasts in and around the Caribbean Sea.


The snapper biscuits we have are the purple ones.

Well, there you go. Enjoy your weekend!

No comments:

Post a Comment