Echinoderms have bilateral tendencies
Chengcheng Ji, Liang Wu, Wenchan Zhao, Sishuo Wang, Jianhao Lv

TL;DR
This study investigates adult starfish behaviors to demonstrate their inherent bilateral tendencies, linking embryonic bilateral development with adult behavior patterns and evolutionary implications.
Contribution
The paper provides evidence of bilateral tendencies in adult starfish behaviors, suggesting a retained bilateral developmental mechanism from their bilaterian ancestors.
Findings
Center of gravity analysis reveals bilateral symmetry planes.
Behavioral patterns show significant bilateral propensity.
Adult starfish exhibit bilateral tendencies consistent with embryonic development.
Abstract
Echinoderms take many forms of symmetry. Pentameral symmetry is the major form and the other forms are derived from it. However, the ancestors of echinoderms, which originated from Cambrian period, were believed to be bilaterians. Echinoderm larvae are bilateral during their early development. During embryonic development of starfish and sea urchins, the position and the developmental sequence of each arm are fixed, implying an auxological anterior/posterior axis. Starfish also possess the Hox gene cluster, which controls symmetrical development. Overall, echinoderms are thought to have a bilateral developmental mechanism and process. In this article, we focused on adult starfish behaviors to corroborate its bilateral tendency. We weighed their central disk and each arm to measure the position of the center of gravity. We then studied their turning-over behavior, crawling behavior and…
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