Evisceration (autotomy)
Evisceration is a method of
Description
When stressed, the sea cucumber faces away from the attacker and contracts its body wall muscles sharply. This causes the wall of the cloaca to tear and the anus to gape. The evisceration process in Eupentacta quinquesemita proceeds as follows:[1][3][4]
- Three main structures weaken over a period of about 1–3 minutes, become soft and transparent, and eventually separate from their attachments. These are the basal part of the components in the tissue.
- Parts eviscerated include the gut, associated haemal vessels, tentacles, and introvert (the dexterous coelomic cavity.
- Most of the gonad stays behind. Only strands of gonad tangled in the gut are eviscerated. The paired respiratory trees and cloaca also remain (although they may be expelled in other species)
- The introvert changes from being firm and opaque to being soft and translucent. The body-wall muscles contract and the increased pressure forces coelomic fluid and viscera into the introvert. It enlarges like a balloon and soon ruptures, expelling the fluid and viscera.
- This takes about 20 minutes, with final detachment of the tentacles and introvert sometimes taking as long as 12 hours.
- The anterior rupture seals, at first by muscular contraction and then by healing as a plug of connective-tissue.
Function
During evisceration in some species, several hundred Cuvierian tubules (part of the respiratory tree) may be expelled. Water from the respiratory tree is forced into these tubules causing a rapid expansion and they elongate by up to 20 times their original length. They have great tensile strength and become sticky when they encounter any object. The adhesive is unique among marine invertebrates and a firm grip is obtained in under ten seconds. The mass of threads can entangle and immobilise potential predators such as small fish or crabs. The threads become detached from the sea cucumber which crawls away.[2] The tubules are readily regenerated, a process that takes about 17 days in Holothuria leucospilota and five weeks in Holothuria forskali.[2] The tubules contain a toxic saponin called holothurin, which is also present in the body wall in some sea cucumber species.[5]
Occurrence
The giant California sea cucumber (
Holothuria arenicola is described as a sea cucumber suitable for keeping in aquaria as it does not eviscerate, whereas the "Australian" sea apple (Paracucumaria tricolor) frequently eviscerates.[6]
Similar behaviour
Some starfish evert their stomachs through their mouths to eat their prey. The starfish then retracts its stomach back inside of its body.[7]
In popular culture
Evisceration plays a role in the Theodore Sturgeon short story "The Girl Had Guts" (Venture Science Fiction, January 1957; also appears in his collection "A Touch of Strange").[8]
References
- ^ a b Anon. "Learn about sea cucumbers; Defences and predators". Archived from the original on January 11, 2018. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
- ^ PMID 21680394.
- .
- PMID 11171409.
- ISBN 978-81-315-0104-7.)
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link - ^ Fenner, B. "Sea cucumbers: Not a pretty picture". WetWebMedia.com. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
- ^ Carefoot, Tom. "Adult feeding". Sea Stars: Feeding, growth, & regeneration. A Snail's Odyssey. Archived from the original on May 12, 2013. Retrieved August 14, 2013.
- ^ Sturgeon, Theodore (1958). A Touch of Strange. DoubleDay and Company.