-
South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 15 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 9 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Duration 10 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 10 seconds
-
Synaptula lamperti is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Chaetodon kleinii (Klein's butterflyfish). Coral Sea, Duration 48 seconds
-
Coral Sea, Duration 13 seconds
-
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Duration 14 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Duration 10 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 8 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 7 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Duration 10 seconds
-
Synaptula lamperti is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Xestospongia testudinaria (Barrel sponge). Coral Sea, Duration 17 seconds
-
Coral Sea, Duration 12 seconds
-
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Duration 26 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 9 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Duration 10 seconds
-
South Pacific Ocean, Shot at night, Duration 13 seconds
-
Karen Connolly, from Casey Dunn's Invertebrate Zoology (Biol 0410) course at Brown University, tells the story of how echinoderms (starfish, sea urchins, and their relatives) can change the stiffness of their skin at will.Music by Scott Joplin (freemusicarchive.org/music/Scott_Joplin/Frog_Legs_Ragtime_Era_Favorites/09_-_scott_joplin_-_original_rags).Visit creaturecast.org for more stories about the unexpected world of Biology.
-
South Pacific Ocean, Duration 12 seconds
-
Synaptula lamperti is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Xestospongia testudinaria (Barrel sponge). Coral Sea, Duration 16 seconds
-
Coral Sea, Duration 12 seconds
-
Atlantic Ocean, Caribbean Sea, Duration 24 seconds
-
Coral Sea, Duration 5 seconds
-
Colochirus sp. is not the primary subject of the video clip; the primary subject is Pseudocolochirus violaceaus (Sea apple). Indo-Pacific, Duration 34 seconds