| ECHINODERMSSea urchins These are not very easy species to acclimatize. It is possible to keep one small 
specimen at most, which will often live away from the light. They are herbivores 
that sift the substrate looking for algae to eat. In among the prickles it is possible 
to see the articulated pedicellariae, which end either in a tiny pincer for trapping 
food or a sucker. The latter allows sea urchins to develop on rigid supports or 
the glass sides of the tank. 
 Some species of sea urchins with varying sizes of prickles 
can be found in marine aquariums. Starfish These are not recommended for a marine invertebrate tank, as they attack other 
species, such as sponges. Starfish are in fact either carnivorous, gripping their 
prey with their long arms that emerge from a central disc, or microphages, in which 
case they feed on small organisms on the bed. The ophiuroids, sometimes called brittlestars and closely related to starfish, 
have articulated arms which allow them to move around quite quickly. These arms, 
like those of the starfish, can regenerate themselves if they break off. 
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