How Do Sea Urchins Work? - podcast episode cover

How Do Sea Urchins Work?

Oct 24, 20195 min
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Episode description

Spiny on the outside and gooey on the inside, sea urchins are a weird and wonderful animal -- and delicacy. Learn more about them in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey rain Stuff, Lauren voc obam here. Whoever it was that first came upon the sharp, spiny body of a sea urchin and said, Hey, let's crack this bad boy open and see if the orange goo inside tastes good. Deserves a gold medal in bravery and sheer determination. The sea urchin is a small, spiny sea creature called a kindaderm.

Sea urchins, along with all members of the Philomicina dermata, are found only in the ocean, a particularly unusual quality as a large number of aquatic animals tend to take up residents in lakes and streams as well. Sea urchins most often can be found in shallow water and even

carpet the sea floor in some areas. Commercial sea urchin fishing began in Japan soon after World War Two, before spreading to the entire Pacific rim by the nineteen seventies, and within two more decades the practice would spread to the Atlantic region. We spoke with Bob Stenic, professor of oceanography, marine biology, and marine policy at the University of Maine. He said the global peak and sea urchin harvests occurred around and has declined ever since. In many places, it's

a poster child example of over fishing. In the year two thousand, twenty million pounds that's about nine million kilos of sea urchins were harvested in California and sold to markets in Japan. But if you've never tried it, you might be curious about what all the fuss is about. We also spoke with David Glass, accomplished dessert chef, self described sea urchin fanatic and father to the author of today's episode. He has a few choice words, but it

comes to consuming these bizarre little creatures. Quote the brilliant orange color, slightly fermented, aroma, and solidity, suggesting a catastrophic explosion of flavor in your mouth. Proceed your first taste. That first taste is sticky, oceanic, sweet and fermented, and everything else that makes up the taste, known as umami. Poetry starts to flood your brain. In Layman's terms, see

chin called uni in Japanese, tastes weird but fine. It's gooey, runny, funky, savory, but with a hint of sweet and salt, with a texture somewhere between an egg yolk and jello. It is a very very unusual taste, but when prepared right provocative after humans, The sea urchin's second biggest predator is one of its own fellow aquinoderm that we're all familiar with, the starfish. If you think starfish are beautiful, get ready

to be kind of horrified with this graphic nugget. The starfish will wrap itself around the sea urchin, then evert their stomach out of their body onto the sea urchin in order to dissolve the shell with their gastric juices and eventually get to the tasty flesh within. And sea

urchin's own eating habits are just as fascinating. It has a circle of five sharp teeth on the bottom of its body and yes, this looks like something out of Stranger Things that it uses to scrape algae and collect kelp off of the rocks it lives on, and can even use them to burrow into the rocks for a better hold on the ocean floor or to make itself a little hideaway. But they're not vegetarians. They'll eat other

animals or each other if they get the chance. Scientists also believe that some species of sea urchins don't age, meaning they don't die unless they're killed by something, and they don't lose the capacity to reproduce. Stenic said, a sea urchin's body plan is pretty unique. One could say it's a hollow limestone sphere made out of numerous hexagonal plates, sort of like a geodisc dome, with spines that make it look like a pincushion. They move slowly using numerous

small tubular section devices called tube feet. These tube feet are strong muscles the protrude from the ends of the spines, which they can attach to rocks or coral, allowing them to move over the sea floor and those little spines. Think of them as sharp feet that are just achin to pierce your skin. While it's certainly not pleasant, Stenic assures that stepping on a sea urchin is not deadly, and he has to date never heard of a fatal

case to an accidental trampling. Still, if you're worried about stepping on one of these guys, well maybe wear rubber soled shoes and try not to prick on the feet by one of these spines can cause damage to the skin and sometimes even the bone inside a few species. Spines can be venomous, but not so much that it would be fatal to humans. The worst that can happen is a potential allergic reaction or further injury from trying

to remove the spine. Instead of tugging at it, use vinegar, which will dissolve the spine and leave behind only the distant memory of that time that you stepped on a living pin cushion. So, whether you accidentally come upon these spiny marine creatures on the sea floor via your foot, or take a bit of its insides brushed with soy sauce over rice, you really have to appreciate the sea

urchin for its unbroken commitment to staying weird. Today's episode was written by Jeremy Glass and produced by Tyler Clang. Brain Stuff is a production of I Heart Radio's How Stuff Works. For more in this and lots of other weird topics, visit our home planet, how Stuff Works dot com, and for more podcasts for my heart Radio, visit the I heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows.

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