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Polychaete
National Geographic
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1:20
The National Security Ballad 🇨🇦 | Brittlestar
4K views
5 months ago
Facebook
Brittlestar
Brittle Star
7 months ago
oceanconservancy.org
1:33
BETRAYAL SEASON 🇨🇦 | Brittlestar
256.2K views
Apr 5, 2025
Facebook
Brittlestar
0:51
What Do Brittle Stars Eat? - Reef Keeping World
Mar 15, 2021
reefkeepingworld.com
1:27
PRIME MINISTER ANNE MURRAY | Brittlestar
150.7K views
Mar 29, 2025
Facebook
Brittlestar
1:23
While the hard walls of submarine canyons make great habitat, thanks to currents that flow through canyons and deliver food, the sedimented floors of these underwater chasms can also be full of life! Fish, crabs, sponges, anemones, and many, MANY brittle stars were found making happy homes on the seafloor of this canyon in the Gulf of Alaska. This #OceanMonth, take the plunge into submarine canyons: https://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/news/exploration-extras/24-national-ocean-month/welcome.html#seamo
37.9K views
Jun 6, 2024
Facebook
NOAA Ocean Exploration
1:58
Explaining Canada Day To Americans | Brittlestar
1.1M views
10 months ago
Facebook
Brittlestar
0:55
Check out this curious encounter between a searobin and a very persistent brittle star! Seen during a 2015 expedition to explore off Puerto Rico. Today we will begin an expedition on NOAA Ship Okeanos Explorer focused on mapping waters south of Puerto Rico generally deeper than 200 meters (656 feet). While we won't be diving on this expedition (sorry!), the mapping data collected will help increase understanding of deep-sea coral and sponge communities and important fish habitats. Learn more abo
18.4K views
Mar 10, 2022
Facebook
NOAA Ocean Exploration
0:10
Common brittle star (Ophiothrix fragilis) slowly crawling along the seabed, close-up.
Apr 14, 2024
Adobe
portunus
0:19
Getting ready to slide into the weekend like... This daisy brittle star slinks along in such a fascinating way. Sometimes known as a serpent star, daisy brittle stars feed by scrapping tiny organisms off rocks with their special tube feet. Maybe this star was having a snack while strolling! Daisy brittle stars are in class Ophiuroidea. Globally, there address more than 1,600 brittle stars and basket stars. | Museum of Natural History
353 views
Nov 2, 2023
Facebook
Museum of Natural History
0:21
“Brittle Stars” Unlike typical sea stars, brittle stars have a small central disc that houses their organs, and five long, slender, flexible arms that are clearly set off from the disc. Their arms are fragile they can easily break off if threatened, but the brittle star can often regenerate them. Their “mouth” is on the underside of the central disc. They lack an anus. They eat detritus, plankton, small organisms are ingested, digested in the stomach, and waste is expelled through the mouth. Ma
1.4K views
5 months ago
Facebook
Treasure Seekers Shell Tours
1:07
From five jaws to regenerating arms: fascinating facts about brittle stars
5 months ago
MSN
BossaNews UK
Solving an Undersea Mystery With CT Scans
Feb 12, 2016
theatlantic.com
1:01
Brittle stars are a truly alien looking animal with their long spindly arms and large central disc, moving around the ocean floors searching for food. Despite being called stars or starfish, theyre a different family of echinoderms entirely, differentiating themselves by containing all their internal organs in their central discs and using their arms purely for movement and obtaining food. These fascinating critters live in many different trophic levels of the ocean and are great hunters as well
8.1K views
8 months ago
Facebook
Critterfide
1:08
Brittle stars were one of the first animals in the ocean that truly captivated me, even before sea slugs. I first saw a brittle star in person when I was a child out tidepooling with my mom. Immediately I was entranced, I had seen plenty of starfish, crabs, fish, and pretty much every other large group of marine critter, but seeing a brittle star in person was truly a core memory. I was immediately interested in their long independently moving arms, their funny ways of lifting themselves over ro
679.4K views
7 months ago
Facebook
Critterfide
Dancing brittle stars tell an ancient tale of life and death in brutal seas
Jul 20, 2024
theconversation.com
0:33
Regrowing Magic Star😲 Look closely — have you ever seen something like this before? What you’re looking at is a Brittle Star, a sea creature related to starfish. These fascinating animals live along coastlines and coral reefs, and some species are even found over 20,000 feet deep in the ocean. Here’s the interesting part — just like a lizard that drops its tail when threatened, a brittle star can detach its arm to escape and later grow it back. This unique ability helps it survive predators and
678 views
6 months ago
Facebook
Light in Sky
0:07
Gray Brittle Stars | Salish Sea Marine Wildlife | #Shorts
2.1K views
3 months ago
YouTube
Captain Eelgrass
0:25
Omg😳giant brittle star cracks the egg☄️🐣
2.9M views
1 month ago
x.com
Nature Chapter
3:00
Pig-Snout Looking Fossil Found in South Pacific
6 views
1 month ago
Dailymotion
Live Science
Brandon Critter on Instagram: "Brittle stars are a truly alien looking animal with their long spindly arms and large central disc, moving around the ocean floors searching for food. Despite being called stars or starfish, theyre a different family of echinoderms entirely, differentiating themselves by containing all their internal organs in their central discs and using their arms purely for movement and obtaining food. These fascinating critters live in many different trophic levels of the ocea
193K views
11 months ago
Instagram
critterfide
2:49
Facts: The Brittle Star
96.1K views
Sep 4, 2020
YouTube
Deep Marine Scenes
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Butterfly: A Life | National Geographic
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Oct 15, 2010
YouTube
National Geographic
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Sunflower Seastar: Terrifying Predator? | National Geographic
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Dec 8, 2017
YouTube
National Geographic
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Brittle Stars | Fascinating facts about the unusual echinoderm that flees from light
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Apr 10, 2021
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Feather Stars and Their Animal Invaders | Nat Geo Wild
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