Pourtalesia miranda
Pourtalesia miranda, commonly known as the wonderful sea urchin, is a species of sea urchin in the family Pourtalesiidae. It is found at abyssal depths in the Atlantic Ocean.
Description
The thin-shelled test is bottle-shaped, more than twice as long as it is wide, and with a marked rostrum at the posterior end. At the anterior end, the aboral ambulacrum is sunk, forming a funnel-like, forward-facing, nearly circular opening that leads to the peristome. The aboral surface has scattered low tubercles. Pourtalesia miranda differs from the otherwise similar Helgocystis in having the posterior ambulacral plate separate from the others. Adults are about long.The post-larval Pourtalesia miranda is at first radially symmetric, but as it grows, it becomes increasingly bilaterally symmetric. Growth is performed in two ways, by the creation of new plates at the apical end, and by the enlargement of existing plates by accretion around their margins. It is in the combination of these two mechanisms that this echinoid achieves its unusual form, with the fifth interambulacrum being progressively broken into two parts.