ABSTRACT
Time course studies employing the fluorescent, high molecular weight tracer, fluorescein isothiocyanate dextran, confirm that there is a steady entry of sea water through the madreporite of the starfish, Echinaster graminicola, even under constant environmental conditions. This entry serves to supply replacement fluid to both the water vascular system and the perivisceral coelom, with more going to the latter than the former (10·67 vs 6·35 μl h−1 for a 7·25 g animal). Since nearly 2·4 days may be required for an animal to take up 1 ml of sea water through the madreporite, the rate of entry is too low to be easily seen in direct observation, or to have immediate physiological consequences if prevented. Nevertheless, the rate is probably sufficient to make a substantial contribution to fluid volume regulation, functioning along with osmolyte transport and other processes that have been emphasized in recent literature.