The starfish doesn't creep around the ocean floor with its arms! They actually use tiny tube feet to move around. If you turn a live starfish over you will see its tiny tube feet wiggling back at you.
Starfish, or sea stars, move with their tube-feet on the underside of their body.
a starfish moves by how it has little tube feet on the bottom of it.
it moves its back legs slowly
Suckers on a starfish are located on the tube feet, which are part of its water vascular system. These tube feet extend from the underside of the starfish's arms and are used for locomotion, feeding, and gripping surfaces. The suckers enable the starfish to adhere to rocks and other substrates as it moves or captures prey.
Sea stars do not have a brain; they have a simple ring of nerve cells that moves information around the body.
yes they do they hide under the sand and stay very quiet
the slowest land mammal is the three-toed sloth and it can go up to 1.2 mph
A starfish has tubular feet, which are tube-like. A snail moves on a muscular foot lubricated with slime.
there are cusion starfish, reef starfish, spiny starfish and fire brick starfish in new zealand.
It is called toilet water.
Yes they can
Sure, starfish larvae are planktonic. Adult starfish are not.
Starfish Ancestors