Echinoderms, such as starfish and sea urchins, typically inhabit marine environments, particularly in shallow waters along Coastlines, coral reefs, and rocky substrates. They can also be found at various depths in the ocean, from tidal pools to deep-sea habitats. Their unique water vascular system allows them to navigate and thrive in diverse marine ecosystems.
A starfish is an echinoderm.
No. A spider is an arachnid. A starfish is an example of an echinoderm.
Echinoderm is an invertebrate and therfore it has no backbone
Yes sand dollar is an echinoderm.
an echinoderm is an organism with no spine
A bird is NOT an echinoderm because they dont live in salt water
Because echinoderm means "spiny skin."
Yes , a starfish is an echinoderm . It belongs to class Asteroidea . It is marine .
The nervous system of the echinoderm lacks a cat and a zebra leg, with the fur from a fish, the echinoderm (ee-chee-no-derm) transacts this with its ability to eat rocks, forming a poylp. This makes the echinoderm smart enough to live.
No
No
no, a sea cucumber is an Echinoderm.