These spherical animals are covered in sharp spines and a skin over their test (the shell that protects their organs). They have five rows of tube feet for movement and gas exchange. Adolescents have mostly pale green spines but these darken to purple as they mature.
Habitat
Rocky intertidal and subtidal areas, including kelp beds, to depths of 525’.
Diet
Omnivorous; primarily algae, including bull and giant kelp, but will also eat dead fish, barnacles, and sponges.
Life History
Purple sea urchins reproduce by broadcast spawning.The tiny eggs will attach to structures such as kelp or rocks. The larvae spend 2-4 weeks as plankton, and during this time can clone themselves, with larvae budding off from various body regions. They undergo metamorphosis and settle by the time they reach 0.2 inches long. Purple sea urchins can reach a diameter of 4 inches and a height of 1.6 inches and their average lifespan is 20 years, though they might live as long as 70 years.
IUCN Status
Not Evaluated, Least Concern
Ecosystem & Cultural Importance
Purple sea urchins prefer to eat kelp. They have 2 different feeding modes: they can act as sedentary feeders catching drifting kelp, but when this supply drops off, they switch to active foraging and can form dense feeding fronts that completely remove a kelp forest, leaving behind an urchin barren. Once the forest/food is gone, the gonads of the urchin shrink, so they lose their nutritional value for any potential predators, and may exist in this zombie state for decades. A decrease in the predators of urchins, especially sea otters and sunflower stars, has enabled them to overpopulate.
Sea otters, sunflower stars, leather stars, California sheepshead, spiny lobsters, and white sea urchins are their main predators.
Purple sea urchins have been extensively used in scientific research, including in developmental biology studies, since they have clear embryos.
In the intertidal, urchins may “decorate” themselves with shells, rocks, or algae, likely for protection from sun and predators.
Sea urchins have 5 sharp teeth arranged in a circle on their underside, called an Aristotle’s Lantern. Besides eating, they can use these teeth to dig a depression in a rock for protection. Sometimes an urchin will grow too big to leave its depression and then is stuck there, relying on food drifting by for sustenance.
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