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Starfish eversion

Image of anemones and corals

Description:

Summary[edit] Description: English: Original description: Sea stars have what many might consider unusual eating habits. Rather than ingesting prey through its mouth, a sea star will push its stomach out of its mouth to begin feeding. This process is called eversion and is done so that the starfish can expose prey to digestive enzymes and begin its digestion outside of its body. The stomach will not be pulled back into the sea star’s body until the liquefied food has been absorbed through the stomach lining. This image, taken over 2500 m deep, depicts a Circeaster pullus everting its stomach in order to feed on an unfortunate Victorgorgia coral colony. Seen September 21, 2015, during a dive investigating the northeast slope of a cone feature on an unnamed seamount within the Pacific Remote Islands Marine National Monument. Date: 25 May 2006, 21:21:39. Source: Flickr. Author: NOAA.

Source Information

license
cc-by-sa-3.0
copyright
NOAA
creator
NOAA
source
Flickr user ID oceanexplorergov
original
original media file
visit source
partner site
Wikimedia Commons
ID
d805370ef51f90fcd80386636d651085