The "flower sea urchin" (Toxopneustes pileolus) is a rather big regular sea urchin, which can reach up to 15cm in diameter (6 inches). Its pentaradial symmetry is quite obvious, often showing the ten radial sutures, ornated by a purple zigzag pattern. Its spikes are clear whitish, yellowish or pinkish. They are short and almost blunt, hidden under a bush of long podia and, above all, big flower-shaped pedicellariae, showing a white corolla (4-5mm diameter) with a purple dot at the center and a bright white circle at the rim. These can close like a trident-like pinch.
After a simple contact with human skin, these pedicellariae can inject a powerful neurotoxin, which can even be lethal to humans in some cases. It is considered the most dangerous sea urchin (and even echinoderm) known in the world.
Die Blomseekastaiing (Toxopneustes pileolus) is 'n seekastaiing wat in die westelike Stille Oseaan asook die Indiese Oseaan voorkom, meer spesifiek, die kus van Oos-Afrika tot by die noorde van KwaZulu-Natal. Die kastaiing word tot 140 mm groot.
Die Blomseekastaiing (Toxopneustes pileolus) is 'n seekastaiing wat in die westelike Stille Oseaan asook die Indiese Oseaan voorkom, meer spesifiek, die kus van Oos-Afrika tot by die noorde van KwaZulu-Natal. Die kastaiing word tot 140 mm groot.
Toxopneustes pileolus, commonly known as the flower urchin, is a widespread and commonly encountered species of sea urchin from the Indo-West Pacific. It is considered highly dangerous, as it is capable of delivering extremely painful and medically significant stings when touched. It inhabits coral reefs, seagrass beds, and rocky or sandy environments at depths of up to 90 m (295 ft). It feeds on algae, bryozoans, and organic detritus.
Its common name is derived from its numerous and distinctively flower-like pedicellariae, which are usually pinkish-white to yellowish-white in color with a central purple dot. It possesses short and blunt spines, though these are commonly hidden beneath the pedicellariae. The rigid "shell" (test) is a variegated deep red and gray in color, though in rare cases it may be greenish to light purple.
Toxopneustes pileolus is one of four species belonging to the genus Toxopneustes. It belongs to the family Toxopneustidae in the order Camarodonta. It was originally described as Echinus pileolus by the French naturalist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck in 1816, in the second book of his Histoire naturelle des animaux sans vertèbres series. It was later used as the type species for the newly created genus Toxopneustes by the Swiss American biologist Louis Agassiz.[1]
The generic name Toxopneustes literally means "poison breath", derived from Greek τοξικόν [φάρμακον] (toksikón [phármakon], "arrow [poison]") and πνευστος (pneustos, "breath"). The specific name pileolus means "little cap" or "skullcap", from Latin pileus, a kind of brimless conical felt cap. In English, Toxopneustes pileolus is most widely known as the "flower urchin".[1] It is also sometimes known under various other common names, including "trumpet sea urchin",[2] "flower tip urchin",[3] "felt cap sea urchin",[4] and "poison claw sea urchin".[5] In the seashell collecting trade, Toxopneustes pileolus is known as the "mushroom urchin", due to their spineless empty shells (tests) resembling the caps of mushrooms.[6][7]
It is also known as tapumiti in Samoan;[8] tehe-tehe batu in Sinama and Tausug;[9] rappa-uni (ラッパウニ) or dokugaze (毒ガゼ) in Japanese;[1][10] and lǎbā dú jí hǎi dǎn (喇叭毒棘海膽) in Chinese.[11]
Flower urchins are relatively large sea urchins. They can reach a maximum diameter of around 15 to 20 cm (6 to 8 in).[12][13]
Like most echinoderms, the body of adult flower urchins is equally divided into identical segments around a central axis in multiples of five (pentaradial symmetry). The rigid "shell" (test) has five interambulacral segments separated from each other by five ambulacral segments, each of them are composed of smaller regularly interlocking plates. It is overlaid by a thin layer of skin in living individuals. The test is variegated in coloration, usually deep red and grey, though there are rare instances of green and pale purple.[14][15][16] Each ambulacral segment is ornamented by a large purple zigzag pattern running along its length.[14]
Two rows of tube feet emerge from the grooves on either side of each of the ambulacral segments (for a total of ten rows). The tube feet are individually composed of a thin muscular stalk (podia) tipped with a small suction cup (ampulla). The mouth is centrally located in the bottom (oral) surface of the test. It is surrounded by a ring of small plates overlaid by softer tissue known as the peristome. Embedded in the peristome are five calcareous "teeth" collectively known as Aristotle's lantern. These are used for grinding the flower urchin's food. The anus is situated on the upper (aboral) surface of the test, directly opposite the mouth. Like the mouth, it is surrounded by a ring of small plates known as the periproct. Surrounding the anal opening are five smaller holes (the genital pores) which are directly connected to the gonads inside the body cavity.[14][15]
The most conspicuous feature of flower urchins are their pedicellariae (stalked grasping appendages). Flower urchins possess four types of pedicellariae, distinguished by form and function, but only two are abundant. The first type are the ophicephalous pedicellariae. They resemble tube feet, except they end in three small claws (called valves) rather than suction cups. These are used to keep the body surface clear of algae, encrusting organisms, and unwanted debris.[16][17][18][19]
The second type are the globiferous pedicellariae which superficially resemble flowers (hence its common name).[21] These are more specialized and are used for defense against predators and larger ectoparasites. Globiferous pedicellariae also end in a three-valved claw-like grasping appendage, like they do in ophicephalous pedicellariae, but they are much larger.[19][22] The valves are connected to each other by a distinctive circular membrane around 4 to 5 mm (0.16 to 0.20 in) in diameter. They are pinkish-white to yellowish-white in color with a central purple dot and a bright white rim.[14][19] Each valve ends in a sharp fang-like tip which is capable of penetrating human skin.[18][23][24] The base of the valves also house venom glands.[19][25] Some authors further subdivide globiferous pedicellariae into two subtypes based on size - the trumpet pedicellariae and the giant pedicellariae.[21] The other two types of pedicellariae - tridentate and triphyllous - are rare or restricted only to certain areas of the test.[16]
The relatively blunt spines are quite short and are usually hidden below the flower-like pedicellariae. They can vary from white, pink, yellow, light green, to purple in coloration with lighter-colored tips.[14][15]
Other members of the genus Toxopneustes are similar in appearance and can be mistaken for flower urchins. Toxopneustes roseus can be distinguished by the uniform coloration of their tests of pink, brown, or purple. It is also restricted to the East Pacific and thus aren't found together with flower urchins. Toxopneustes elegans, which is only found around Japan, can be distinguished by the presence of a distinctive dark stripe just below the tips of their spines. Toxopneustes maculatus is a very rare species known only from specimens from Réunion, Christmas Island, and the Palmyra Atoll. It can be distinguished by the bright violet coloration on the bottom and in a band around the middle of their tests.[15]
Flower urchins are widespread and common in the tropical Indo-West Pacific.[12] They can be found north from Okinawa, Japan, to Tasmania, Australia in the south;[17][26] and west from the Red Sea and the East African coast,[1] to Raratonga in the Cook Islands in the east.[27] In Mexican waters, the Flower Urchin can be found in every waters of the Pacific with the exception that they are absent from Guerrero Negro (Bahia Tortugas), Baja California, northward along the central and northwest coasts of Baja.[28]
They are found among coral reefs, coral rubble, rocks, sand, and seagrass beds at depths of 0 to 90 m (0 to 295 ft) from the water's surface.[12][29] They may sometimes partially bury themselves on the substrate.[17]
Flower urchins feed on algae, bryozoans, and organic detritus.[26][30]
Flower urchins have few predators.[17] They are known to be toxic to fish. One of the few organisms capable of consuming flower urchins with no apparent adverse effects is the predatory corallimorph Paracorynactis hoplites. However it is unknown if flower urchins are among its natural prey.[31]
The commensal alpheid shrimp Athanas areteformis, can sometimes be found living among the spines of flower urchins (as well as burrowing urchins and collector urchins).[32] The intestines of flower urchins can also serve as habitats for the commensal flatworm Syndesmis longicanalis.[33]
Flower urchins are also common hosts of the zebra crab, Zebrida adamsii. These tiny crabs are obligate symbionts of sea urchins. They cling to the spines on the outer surface of the sea urchin test using their highly specialized walking legs. Because their ability to walk on substrates like sand is impaired, zebra crabs spend their entire benthic life stage attached to sea urchins, switching between hosts only during the mating season. Usually only one zebra crab is attached to an individual sea urchin outside of the mating season, but larger sea urchins can be hosts to two (very rarely more). The area of the test they inhabit is characteristically smooth; completely devoid of spines, pedicellariae, tube feet, and even epidermis. It is unknown if they physically destroy and/or consume these appendages or if they use other stimuli to induce the host sea urchins to autotomize. Although previously considered harmless commensals, authors have since reclassified them as parasites. In addition to the visible external damage, a 1974 study also observed abnormal behavior and coloration among infected sea urchins. They also appear to be immune to the flower urchin's venom.[10][34][35]
Flower urchins are dioecious (having separate male and female individuals), but it is almost impossible to determine the sex of an individual by external characteristics alone. A possible method is by examining the external characteristics of the genital pores (gonopores). In males, they are generally short, cone-shaped, and extrude above the body surface; while in females they are usually sunken. However this is not reliable, as 15% of the cases can exhibit the opposite characteristics. All other external features, like shape and size of the tests or color of the spines are indistinguishable between the two sexes.[36] Flower urchins have a chromosome number of 2n = 42.[37]
Relatively little is known of the spawning behavior of flower urchins. Like other sea urchins, fertilization happens externally. Males and females release free-swimming gametes (eggs and sperm) directly into the water currents in mass spawning events.[38] In Okinawa, Japan, a 1994 study identified the spawning season of flower urchins as occurring in winter, at the same time as the closely related and sympatric Toxopneustes elegans. It also recorded possible natural hybrids resulting from instances where the eggs of Toxopneustes pileolus are fertilized by the sperm of Toxopneustes elegans.[39]
In Taiwan, a 2010 study observed flower urchins spawning in May on the years 2007 and 2009. They occurred on highly similar conditions: in the afternoon low tide of the spring tide immediately after a new moon. During the event, spawning individuals discard the debris that usually cover their bodies before releasing their gametes into the water.[38] Another study published in 2013 did not find any obvious correlation between lunar and tidal cycles to the mass spawning behavior of the flower urchin populations in southern Taiwan. It did note that the spawning patterns appeared to be non-random, with higher spawning rates on daytime on certain dates. However, the study was conducted within a span of only five months (from April to August 2010).[40]
Flower urchins are among the numerous species of sea urchins known as "collector urchins", so named because they frequently cover the upper surfaces of their bodies with debris from their surroundings. This behavior is usually referred to as "covering" or "heaping".[29][34][41] Flower urchins are usually found almost completely covered in objects like dead coral fragments, shells, seaweed, and rocks.[17][42] These are held fast to their bodies using their tube feet and pedicellariae.[38]
The function of this behavior is not well understood. Some authors believe that the debris serve as ballast, preventing them from being swept away by wave surges when feeding;[38][43] while others believe that they may function as some sort of defense against predation.[34] A 2007 study has hypothesized that the behavior may serve as protection from UV radiation during daytime.[44]
At least two active toxins have been purified from the pedicellarial venom of flower urchins in two studies.[45] The first was discovered in 1991 and named Contractin A. It was found to interfere with the transmission of signals at nerve endings as well as cause hemagglutination (clumping of the red blood cells).[46][47] When administered to guinea pigs, it resulted in contractions in the smooth muscles.[48]
The second, discovered in 1994, is a protein toxin named peditoxin. It is composed of the protein pedin and the active prosthetic group pedoxin. At low doses to mice, pedoxin was found to result in markedly lower body temperatures, muscle relaxation, sedation, and anesthetic coma. At higher doses it resulted in convulsions and death. Pedin itself is non-toxic, but it magnifies the effects of pedoxin. When combined into the holoprotein peditoxin, even low doses resulted in anaphylaxis-like shock and death.[49]
UT841, a possible third toxin isolated in 2001, has been shown to affect brain metabolism in chicks. However, the authors are unclear on whether UT841 may actually be the same compound as Contractin A, since both have the same molecular weight of 18,000 Da and an almost identical N-terminal sequence.[50]
In addition to these toxins, lectins have also been isolated from flower urchin venom. Among them is SUL-I, SUL-II, SUL-IA, and SUL-III (SUL stands for "sea urchin lectin"). These lectins may be valuable as research tools for investigating the functions of cell processes.[51]
Unlike most other venomous sea urchins, flower urchins and related toxopneustids do not deliver their venom through spines. Instead, the venom is administered through the flower-like globiferous pedicellariae.[18][23][24][25] If undisturbed, the tips of the globiferous pedicellariae are usually expanded into round cup-like shapes. They possess tiny sensors on their inside surfaces which can detect threats by touch and chemical stimuli. When agitated or brushed against by a potential threat, the pedicellariae will immediately snap shut and inject venom. The claws of the pedicellariae may also break off from their stalks and adhere to the point of contact, retaining the ability to continually inject venom for several hours.[4][34][52][53]
The potency of the pedicellarial venom is believed to be directly related to the size of the pedicellariae. Thus individuals with larger globiferous pedicellariae are considered to be more dangerous than individuals with more numerous but smaller globiferous pedicellariae.[21]
In 1930, the Japanese marine biologist Tsutomu Fujiwara accidentally envenomated himself with seven or eight flower urchin pedicellariae while working in a fishing boat. He described his experience in a paper published in 1935:[34][52][53]
On June 26, 1930, while I was working on a fishing boat on the coast of Tsutajima in Saganoseki, I scooped up with my bare hand an individual of the sea-urchin which had been carried up by a diver with a fishing implement on the water surface from the sea-bottom about 20 fathoms in depth, and I transferred the sea-urchin into a small tank in the boat. At that time, 7 or 8 pedicellariae stubbornly attached themselves to a side of the middle finger of my right hand, detached from the stalk and remained on the skin of my finger.
Instantly, I felt a severe pain resembling that caused by the cnidoblast of Coelenterata, and I felt as if the toxin were beginning to move rapidly to the blood vessel from the stung area towards my heart. After a while, I experienced a faint giddiness, difficulty of respiration, paralysis of the lips, tongue and eyelids, relaxation of muscles in the limbs, was hardly able to speak or control my facial expression, and felt almost as if I were going to die. About 15 minutes afterwards, I felt that pains gradually diminish and after about an hour they disappeared completely. But the facial paralysis like that caused by cocainization continued for about six hours.
Tsutomu Fujiwara (1935). "On the poisonous pedicellaria of Toxopneustes pileolus (Lamarck)". Annotationes Zoologicae Japonenses. 15 (1): 62–68.
There have been reports of fatalities resulting from flower urchin envenomation.[54] One such report was the purported drowning of a pearl diver after being rendered unconscious from accidental contact with a flower urchin.[55][56][57] But it remains difficult to confirm if these incidents actually occurred since no documentation or details of the deaths have been uncovered so far.[55][58]
Nevertheless, flower urchins are still considered highly dangerous. The severe debilitating pain of the flower urchin sting compounded by muscular paralysis, breathing problems, numbness, and disorientation can result in accidental drowning among divers and swimmers.[4][18][59] The flower urchin was named the "most dangerous sea urchin" in the 2014 Guinness World Records.[60]
Despite being venomous, flower urchins are sometimes harvested in East Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Pacific Islands for their edible gonads.[8][9][61][62] In the Sulu Archipelago of the Philippines and eastern Sabah, Malaysia, flower urchins are among the species of edible sea urchins used by the Sama-Bajau and Tausug people to make a traditional delicacy known as oko-oko or ketupat tehe tehe. This is prepared by degutting the test and then filling it with glutinous rice and coconut milk before boiling.[9]
In Okinawa, fishermen observed numerous individuals of the predatory crown-of-thorns starfish (Acanthaster planci) gathering around the remains of the internal organs of flower urchins.[63] A follow-up study by Japanese researchers in 2001 confirmed that the viscera of flower urchins could indeed attract crown-of-thorns starfish in both aquarium and open sea experiments. The attractant compounds were isolated and identified as arachidonic acid and α-linolenic acid. The authors believe that this discovery may be used to augment population control measures of the crown-of-thorns starfish, which are highly destructive to coral reefs.[64]
Toxopneustes pileolus, commonly known as the flower urchin, is a widespread and commonly encountered species of sea urchin from the Indo-West Pacific. It is considered highly dangerous, as it is capable of delivering extremely painful and medically significant stings when touched. It inhabits coral reefs, seagrass beds, and rocky or sandy environments at depths of up to 90 m (295 ft). It feeds on algae, bryozoans, and organic detritus.
Its common name is derived from its numerous and distinctively flower-like pedicellariae, which are usually pinkish-white to yellowish-white in color with a central purple dot. It possesses short and blunt spines, though these are commonly hidden beneath the pedicellariae. The rigid "shell" (test) is a variegated deep red and gray in color, though in rare cases it may be greenish to light purple.
Oursin fleur, Oursin toxique
Toxopneustes pileolus (ou oursin fleur) est une espèce d’oursins tropical venimeux pouvant infliger de dangereuses piqures[1].
C'est un gros oursin régulier pouvant mesurer jusqu'à 15 cm de diamètre[2]. La symétrie pentaradiaire de cet oursin est très visible, laissant souvent apparaître les dix sutures des plaques entre les organes externes, relevées de violet en zig-zag. Ses radioles (piquants), blanchâtres ou roses, sont courtes et presque entièrement dissimulées sous une broussaille de podia transparents et allongés, et de pédicellaires en forme de corolle discoïde (auxquelles il doit son nom français), mesurant 4-5 mm de diamètre et pouvant se fermer en pince à trois mors[3], de couleur pâle mais ponctués d'un cœur violet et cerclées d'un blanc pur très lumineux. Ceux-ci sont équipés de glandes à venin pouvant inoculer par simple contact une toxine extrêmement puissante, voire mortelle pour l'homme : c'est l'oursin (et même l'échinoderme) le plus dangereux[2].
oursin-fleur à Taiwan.
à Okinawa.
à La Réunion.
Face orale. Les dix zones ambulacraires sont bien visibles avec leurs podia.
Cet oursin vit à faible profondeur (0-15 m), ce qui le rend d'autant plus dangereux[3]. Il affectionne les lagons coralliens calmes, et les herbiers ou les fonds sableux[2].
On le trouve dans les régions tropicales du bassin Indo-Pacifique[2], des côtes est-africaines aux archipels du Pacifique[3].
C'est un oursin principalement herbivore, qui se nourrit d'algues et d'herbes marines. Pendant la journée, il se recouvre souvent de cailloux et de débris pour se camoufler[4], ce qui le rend d'autant plus dangereux qu'il est difficile à voir[5].
La reproduction est gonochorique, et après s'être débarrassés de leur camouflage[4],[5], mâles et femelles relâchent leurs gamètes en même temps en pleine eau (généralement au printemps[4]), où œufs puis larves vont évoluer parmi le plancton pendant quelques semaines avant de se fixer[2].
Cette espèce venimeuse peut être l'hôte d'animaux symbiotiques, que l'oursin protège efficacement grâce à son venin, sans doute en échange de services de nettoyage et de déparasitage. On rencontre par exemple entre ses piquants la crevette Gnathophylloides mineri ou encore le crabe-zèbre Zebrida adamsii, qui se ménage une zone nue sans pédicellaires, sans pour autant de réponse agressive de la part de l'oursin[5].
Comme dit plus haut, ce bel oursin si prisé des photographes sous-marins est un animal redoutable : une simple caresse de la main peut s'avérer mortelle, car son venin provient des pédicellaires et non des piquants. Il s'agit d'un des animaux venimeux les plus dangereux des écosystèmes coralliens (d'autant plus qu'il est fréquent dans certains endroits), et de l'échinoderme le plus venimeux[5].
Sa toxine est une puissante neurotoxine paralytique, qui injectée en quantité suffisante peut suffire à provoquer la mort d'un homme par étouffement en moins d'une heure, et a fortiori la noyade d'un baigneur[5]. Ce venin peut donc être mortel pour un homme adulte, et on n'en connait pas de contre-poison ; une hospitalisation rapide est donc préconisée en cas d'envenimation[6].
Il semble toutefois que chez certains petits spécimens, les aiguillons microscopiques des pédicellaires n'arrivent pas à percer les épidermes épais comme ceux des mains et des pieds, permettant de manipuler l'animal sans trop de danger : cette pratique hasardeuse est toutefois vivement déconseillée[3],[5].
Oursin fleur, Oursin toxique
Toxopneustes pileolus (ou oursin fleur) est une espèce d’oursins tropical venimeux pouvant infliger de dangereuses piqures.
Toxopneustes pileolus is een zee-egel uit de familie Toxopneustidae.
De wetenschappelijke naam van de soort werd in 1816 gepubliceerd door Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck.
Bronnen, noten en/of referentiesToxopneustes pileolus, thường được gọi là nhím biển hoa, là một loài cầu gai phổ biến và thường gặp từ Ấn Độ-Tây Thái Bình Dương. Loài này được coi là rất nguy hiểm, vì vết chích có khả năng gây nhức nhối và có tác động đáng kể khi người ta chạm vào nó. Loài này sinh sống ở rạn san hô, thảm cỏ biển, và môi trường đá hoặc cát ở độ sâu lên đến 90 m (295 ft). Chúng ăn tảo, bryozoans, và mùn bã hữu cơ.
Tên phổ biến của loài này có nguồn gốc từ pedicellariae như bông hoa và rất đặc trưng của nó, các vảy gai này thường trắng-hơi hồng đến trắng-hơi vàng. Chúng có gai ngắn và thẳng, mặc dù các gai này thường ẩn bên dưới các pedicellariae.
Toxopneustes pileolus, thường được gọi là nhím biển hoa, là một loài cầu gai phổ biến và thường gặp từ Ấn Độ-Tây Thái Bình Dương. Loài này được coi là rất nguy hiểm, vì vết chích có khả năng gây nhức nhối và có tác động đáng kể khi người ta chạm vào nó. Loài này sinh sống ở rạn san hô, thảm cỏ biển, và môi trường đá hoặc cát ở độ sâu lên đến 90 m (295 ft). Chúng ăn tảo, bryozoans, và mùn bã hữu cơ.
Tên phổ biến của loài này có nguồn gốc từ pedicellariae như bông hoa và rất đặc trưng của nó, các vảy gai này thường trắng-hơi hồng đến trắng-hơi vàng. Chúng có gai ngắn và thẳng, mặc dù các gai này thường ẩn bên dưới các pedicellariae.
Echinus pileolus Lamarck, 1816
和名 ラッパウニ 英名 Flower urchinラッパウニ(Toxopneustes pileolus、喇叭雲丹)は、ラッパウニ科に属する熱帯系のウニの一種。短い棘を持つ大型種で、有毒である。表面はラッパ型の叉棘に覆われる。
殻は円形でやや扁平、殻径は約10cm。棘は短く、先端は鈍く、黄色から緑で白い筋が入る。生きているときにはラッパ状の構造が表面のほぼ全体を覆う。これがラッパウニの名の由来である。これは棘よりやや短い程度の柄の先端に円盤が乗った形をしている。
これは叉棘といわれるもので、ウニやヒトデには広く見られるものである。基本的には単なる棘でなく、先端に2-3の枝があって、その基部には関節があり、ピンセットのように動かすことの出来る構造である。普通のウニではこれはごく小さくて目立たない。しかしこのウニの場合、長さそのものが普通の棘に近く、しかも先端にある三本の枝が長くて大きく水平に広がるだけでなく、その間に皮膚がつながって全体が円盤状になっている。さらに内側は褐色を帯び、その外周が白くなっているために非常に目立つようになっているのである。なお、この叉棘には毒腺がある。
管足はよく発達しており、棘の数倍も伸びる。見かけでは、外側が叉棘に覆われていて棘が目立たず、さらに管足が多量に伸びていて、体表面に棘が優占する一般的なウニとは異なった外見を呈する。
岩礁海岸の潮間帯から潮下帯に見られる。岩の上に付着しており、往々にして殻の上に貝殻などのゴミを管足で引きつけて乗せている。これはカモフラージュのためと考えられる。
どちらかといえば熱帯系の種で、サンゴ礁に多い。日本では房総半島、相模湾までの本州南岸以南に見られるが、多くない。琉球列島ではより普通に見られる。国外ではインド洋から西太平洋にかけて分布する。
同属のシラヒゲウニ(T. gratilla (L.))も短い棘を持つ大柄なウニで、やはり暖かい海域で普通に見られるが、ラッパ状の叉棘を持っていないので混同することがない。
上記のように叉棘が毒腺を持っている。叉棘の枝のそれぞれの先端がやや内側に曲がって尖っており、これを内側に曲げてつまむようにすることで、毒を注入する。ガンガゼのようにウニの棘が刺さるのではなく、このような動作のために毒を受けるので、刺すと言うより咬むに近い。したがって手で触れたらその瞬間に刺される、というようなことはない。もちろんこれは素手でさわることを奨励するものではない。棘そのものではないから、手袋をすれば問題は少ない。
刺されてすぐは、その部分に疼痛を感じ、多少腫れることがある程度で、瞬時に激痛が走るガンガゼなどに比べると怖さは感じにくい。しかし神経毒であり、次第にしびれを生じたり、息切れが激しくなったり痙攣が起きたりと言った全身の症状を呈することがある。ダイバーが刺されておぼれ死んだという事例もあるという[1]。ただし個人差があるようで、何らの症状が出ないこともある。
なお、近縁のシラヒゲウニも同様の毒を持っているが、被害は少なく、希に食用の生殖腺を取り出す際に叉棘がこれに混入し、食べたときに口中を刺される事故があるという[2]。