Tag Archives: Starfish

Ochre Sea Stars Arrive on Kodiak Island

The Ochre Sea Star (Pisaster ochraceus) has arrived on Kodiak Island. Ochre sea stars are common in the Pacific Northwest, but the species is slowly expanding its range further north into the cooler waters of the Gulf of Alaska. Brenda Konar, professor of marine biology at the University of Alaska Fairbanks, says she thinks Kodiak is near the end of its range.

Ochre stars inhabit the Gulf of Alaska and are now common in Prince William Sound. What does their northward migration mean? Scientists think they could be moving further north due to warmer water temperatures in the North Pacific. Ochres stars are incredibly hardy and adaptive, allowing them to inhabit exposed rocky beaches from Baja California to Prince William Sound. Ochre stars can wedge their bodies into rocky crevices on wind-swept coasts, so they don’t get washed away during a storm.

Ochre sea stars reign near the top of their food chain. Seagulls can eat young sea stars, and sea otters eat sea stars of any size, but they have no other predators. Ochre stars eat a wide variety of prey, including mussels, limpets, sea urchins, snails, chitons, and barnacles.

Ochre stars are important in the intertidal communities they inhabit, and scientists consider them a keystone species because their presence affects the intertidal community. They are voracious predators and seem to prefer mussels. Mussels are superior competitors for space on rocky coasts, but when Ochre stars wipe out a group of mussels, other species move in to colonize the area. Since mussels tolerate desiccation better than Ochre stars, mussels can proliferate in the upper intertidal zone. In contrast, the presence of Ochre stars in the lower intertidal eliminates large mussel beds and allows other species to flourish.

Ochre stars begin breeding at age five. They broadcast their eggs and sperm into the water, and fertilization occurs externally. The larvae float in the ocean for a few months and then settle onto the bottom, where they take on the sea star shape. Scientists believe it is during this floating larval stage when the sea stars expand their range. Ochre stars are the most long-lived species of sea star and can live twenty to thirty-five years.

A massive die-off of sea stars on the west coast of the US, including Alaska, began in 2013. Biologists believe the die-off was caused by a virus that flourished during a cycle of hot water temperatures in the North Pacific. Most sea star species are beginning to recover, and the Ochre star seems to be one of the more resilient species.

Will we see more Ochre stars on Kodiak Island, and if so, what will their presence do to the intertidal communities? In Uyak Bay on Kodiak, where I live, mussels flourish in certain areas, but a large population of sea otters has decimated many of the bivalves, sea urchins, and crabs. If Ochre stars move into this area, will they survive the sea otters, and if so, how will they change the makeup of species in the intertidal zone? Only time will tell.

Thank you for reading!


I am excited to announce my new book about true murder and mystery in Alaska. Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier will be available for pre-order at Amazon on December 1st, and the book will be released in late December.

Robin Barefield is the author of five Alaska wilderness mystery novels: Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, The Fisherman’s Daughter, Karluk Bones, and Massacre at Bear Creek Lodge. She is also the author of the non-fiction book Kodiak Island Wildlife. Sign up below to subscribe to her free monthly newsletter on true crime and mystery in Alaska, and listen to her podcast, Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier.


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Echinoderms in Alaska

Echinoderms are my favorite intertidal animals. They belong to the phylum Echinodermata and live only in marine environments. You won’t find an echinoderm in a river or stream. Their name originates from the Greek word for spiny skin, and all echinoderms have either a hard spiny covering or spiny skin.

What is an echinoderm? While there are around 7,000 species of echinoderms, they fall into seven major classes. These are the sea lilies, sea urchins, sand dollars, sea cucumbers, brittle stars and basket stars, sea daisies, and sea stars – or starfish. Echinoderms live in every marine habitat from the intertidal zone to the deep ocean. They are often brightly colored, and their reds, greens, purples, and oranges make them stand out against the monochromatic background of clam and cockle shells.

Sea Cucumber

Some species of echinoderms do not look as if they should belong to this phylum. A sea urchin does not resemble a sea star, and sea cucumbers look nothing like other echinoderms. Body types range from flowerlike sea lilies to slug-shaped sea cucumbers. However, in addition to the spines, all echinoderms have pentamerous (five-part) radial symmetry, an internal skeleton, and a water-vascular system derived from a central cavity. Look at a sand dollar the next time you pick up one and note the star in the center of the disk and the five-part symmetry. Examine a dead sea urchin once its spines have dropped, and you will see the five plates. If you dissect a sea cucumber, the pentamerous symmetry reveals itself. Some sea stars have many legs, but look closely, and you will see the five-part divisions.

Sand Dollars

An echinoderm has a simple digestive system with a mouth, stomach, intestines, and anus. In many species, the mouth is on the underneath side of the animal, and the anus is on the top. A sea stars can push its stomach through its mouth, allowing it to digest its prey externally. For example, it can insert its stomach into a clam shell once its powerful legs have pried open the shell. The ability to extrude its stomach allows a sea star to eat animals larger than its mouth.

While echinoderms do not have brains, they do have nervous systems. They have tiny eyespots that can detect only light and dark, and some of their tube feet are sensitive to chemicals, allowing them to find food. They do not have a heart, but they have a network of fluid-filled canals. To breathe, they use simple gills, and their tube feet take in oxygen and pass out carbon dioxide.

Sea Star

Echinoderms are either male or female, and they reach sexual maturity when they are two to three years old. Most species broadcast spawn by releasing their eggs and sperm into the water at the same time. A sperm meets up with an egg by chance and fertilizes it. This type of reproduction is hit or miss, but a female releases as many as one hundred million eggs at one time, improving the chances of some being fertilized. Larvae float free for a period and eventually settle to the bottom and develop into their adult form.

Lifestyles of the different groups of echinoderms vary greatly, and over the next few posts, I will take a closer look at some of the species found in Alaska.


Read what the Bears Read!

Kodiak Island Wildlife by Robin Barefield with Photos by Mike Munsey



Robin Barefield is the author of four Alaska wilderness mystery novels: Big Game, Murder Over Kodiak, The Fisherman’s Daughter, and Karluk Bones. Sign up below to subscribe to her free, monthly newsletter on true crime and mystery in Alaska, and listen to her podcast, Murder and Mystery in the Last Frontier.

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