Low-lying Sea Urchin, Tripneustes depressus
Low-lying Sea Urchin, Tripneustes depressus. Urchin collected from a tidal pool in the greater Los Cabos area, Baja California Sur, January 2016. Diameter: 15 cm (5.9 inches).
Low-lying Sea Urchin, Tripneustes depressus. Underwater photograph taken in coastal waters off Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, September 2021. Photograph courtesy of Kevin Erwin, Seattle, Washington. Identification courtesy of Identification courtesy of Dr. Francisco A. Solís-Marín, Mexico City. Kevin reports that the photograph does not do justice to the color of the urchin, it being yellow and green with black. Dr. Solís-Marín indicated that these urchins vary significantly in color during their growth stages.
Low-lying Sea Urchin, Tripneustes depressus. Underwater photograph taken in Zihuantanejo Bay, Guerrero, December 2019. Photograph and identification courtesy of Maude Jette, Dive Zihuantanejo, www.Divezihuantanejo.com.
Low-lying Sea Urchin, Tripneustes depressus. Underwater photograph taken in coastal waters off Puerto Vallarta, Jalisco, September 2021. Photograph courtesy of Kevin Erwin, Seattle, Washington. Identification courtesy of Identification courtesy of Dr. Francisco A. Solís-Marín, Mexico City. Kevin reports that the photograph does not do justice to the color of the urchin, it being yellow and green with black. Dr. Solís-Marín indicated that these urchins vary significantly in color during their growth stages.
Low-lying Sea Urchin, Tripneustes depressus. Underwater photograph taken in Zihuantanejo Bay, Guerrero, December 2019. Photograph and identification courtesy of Maude Jette, Dive Zihuantanejo, www.Divezihuantanejo.com.
Phylogeny: The Low-lying Sea Urchin, Tripneustes depressus (A. Agassiz, 1863), is a member of the Toxopneustidae family of Globular Sea Urchins. The genus Tripneustes is one of eight genera in this family, and there are four species in this genus. They are also known as the Brown Urchin, the Sea Egg and the White Urchin and in Mexico as Erizo de Bajo Perfil.
Morphology: Low-lying Sea Urchins are large dark brown to purple globes that are covered with short thin pale brown spines. The spines are arranged in three vertical series with the internal and external being in a regular pattern and the middle series being irregularly spaced. They have tiny pedicellariae (pincers) between their spines. Their globiferous pedicellariae have a head with three moveable jaws. Each jaw ends in a sharp tooth and has a venom sac at its base. When they pinch their victim, the tooth penetrates the skin and injects the venom. They have an internal skeleton (test) made of overlapping plates (ossicles). The underside or ambulacral area is wide and flattened. The mouth is located in the center of the ambulacral area. Inside the mouth is a complex chewing apparatus, made of five jaws, that is known as an Aristotle’s Lantern. They move by the use of tube feet and by moving their spines. Low-lying Sea Urchins reach a maximum of 15 cm (5.9 inches) in diameter.
Habitat and Distribution: Low-lying Sea Urchins are found in shallow coastal waters at depths of 3 m (10 feet) to 73 m (240 feet). They live on rock, coral and sand. They are an Eastern Pacific species and in Mexican waters are found from Todos Santos, Baja California Sur south to Guatemala, including the Revillagigedos Islands. In the Gulf of California, they are found from Bahía de los Ángeles, Baja California to the Cape Region, Baja California Sur.
Diet: Low-lying Sea Urchins are opportunistic omnivores. Their diet primarily consists of brown, green or red algae, depending on availability. On occasion they are found with pieces of sponge and other invertebrates in their stomachs.
Predators: Despite their venomous pedicellariae, Low-lying Sea Urchins are prey for fish, crustaceans, and sea stars.
Reproduction: Low-lying Sea Urchins are gonochoric (male or female for life). Fertilization is external, through broadcast spawning. The fertilized eggs develop, after about one month, into planktotrophic larvae (echinoplateus) and live for several months before they sink to the bottom and metamorphose into young urchins.
Ecosystem Interactions: Low-lying Sea Urchins are subject to endo- and ectoparasitism at the micro organism level. Very little has been documented regarding other parasitic, commensal, or symbiotic relationships. The venomous pedicellariae probably keep away the epibionts that are usually associated with other sea urchins.
Human Interactions: Low-lying Sea Urchins face some fishing pressure because they are harvested for their roe. They are currently being farmed in small quantities as an experiment for future aquaculture. In medical/pharmaceutical research, this species is of interest because the coelomic fluid in the body cavity contains peptides that act as antivirals against the pseudorabies virus and the rabies virus. The pedicellariae of this species, unlike most sea urchins, are strong enough to penetrate human skin if left in contact for a few seconds. They are known to deliver painful stings when stepped on.
From a conservation perspective, Low-lying Sea Urchins have not been evaluated. The are common with a wide distribution and should be considered as a species of Least Concern.
Synonyms: Hipponoe depressa.