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Sphaerechinus granularis

Sphaerechinus granularis
Sphaerechinus granularis (Lamarck, 1816) 1.jpg
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Class: Echinoidea
Superorder: Echinacea
Order: Temnopleuroida
Family: Toxopneustidae
Genus: Sphaerechinus
Species: S. granularis
Binomial name
Sphaerechinus granularis
(Lamarck, 1816)
Synonyms
  • Echinus (Toxopneustes) albidus (L. Agassiz, 1841)
  • Echinus (Toxopneustes) brevispinosus (Blainville, 1825)
  • Echinus (Toxopneustes) granularis (Lamarck, 1816)
  • Echinus albidus L. Agassiz, 1841
  • Echinus brevispinosus Blainville, 1825
  • Echinus dubius Blainville, 1825
  • Echinus granularis de Lamarck, 1816
  • Echinus subglobiformis Blainville, 1825
  • Sphærechinus brevispinosus (Blainville, 1825)
  • Sphærechinus ovarius Lambert & Thiéry, 1914
  • Sphaerechinus roseus Russo, 1893
  • Strongylocentrotus granularis (Lamarck, 1816)
  • Toxopneustes brevispinosus (L. Agassiz, 1841)

Sphaerechinus granularis is a species of sea urchin in the family Toxopneustidae, commonly known as the purple sea urchin. Its range includes the Mediterranean Sea and eastern Atlantic Ocean.

S. granularis is a large sea urchin, somewhat flattened dorsally and growing to fifteen centimetres in diameter. There are two distinct colour forms. The test is purple in both but one has purple spines and the other white. The spines are short and blunt, all the same length, and arranged neatly in rows.

Sphaerechinus granularis .

Dark pink specimen

Both sides of a dried specimen. - MHNT

S. granularis is found in the Mediterranean Sea and the eastern Atlantic Ocean, from the Channel Islands south to Cape Verde and the Gulf of Guinea. It favours sheltered locations and lives on rocks covered with seaweed or gravelly substrates. It is usually found in the neritic zone down to about thirty metres but occasionally down to a hundred metres in more exposed locations. It is also found in meadows of the seagrass Posidonia oceanica.

S. granularis often covers itself with morsels of algae and shell fragments, which are held in place by the tube feet and by the claw-like structures known as pedicellaria. It grazes on algae, especially encrusting coralline algae, seagrass blades and their epiphytic organisms and detritus.


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