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(I played the game and it did move after all) Tag: Visual edit |
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{{Infobox Diving |
{{Infobox Diving |
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− | |name= |
+ | |name= Sea star |
+ | |jname = ヒトデ |
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+ | |tmname = Hitode |
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− | |scientific name= |
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+ | |imagesize = 300px |
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+ | |scientific name= Certonardoa semiregularis |
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− | |size= |
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− | |shadow= |
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+ | |size= 10.85 in. |
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− | |price= |
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+ | |shadow= Small, slow |
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+ | |index NL = 13 |
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− | |nameother= |
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+ | |price= 100 [[Bells]] |
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+ | |nameother= {{IT}} Stella marina <br> {{FR}} Étoile de mer <br> {{ES}} Estrella de mar |
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+ | }}{{caught|I got sea star! Is a group called a constellation?|New Leaf}} |
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+ | |||
+ | ==Donation to the museum== |
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+ | ===In {{NL|nolink}}=== |
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+ | In {{NL}}, an information board in the [[Museum|aquarium]] will list information about this creature. |
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+ | |||
+ | ''"These star-shaped creatures have hundreds of tiny feet attached to their mobile arms. This allows them to slowly walk and open shellfish for food, making them effective predators. If an arm gets caught and ripped off by another predator, the sea star's arm will just grow back. Some sea stars eat by extending their stomachs out of their mouths to trap and then digest prey."'' |
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+ | ==Encyclopedia Information== |
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+ | ==={{NL|nolink}}=== |
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+ | {{SeafloorEncycNL |
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+ | |file1 = Sea_star.png |
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+ | |imagesize = 240px |
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+ | |quote = I got sea star! Is a group called a constellation? |
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+ | |size = About 11 inches |
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+ | |time = All day |
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+ | |season= All year |
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}} |
}} |
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+ | ==Gallery== |
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+ | <gallery> |
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+ | HNI_0095_sea_star.jpg |
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+ | </gallery> |
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+ | |||
+ | == Further information == |
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+ | {{FurtherInfo|Sea star}} |
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+ | ''Certonardoa semiregularis'' has no common (English) name. Its Japanese name is アカヒトデ literally meaning red starfish. Parasitic snails live on the starfish. This species is distributed in south Honshu in Southeast Asia. Most starfish have five arms that radiate from a central disc, but the number varies with the group. |
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+ | <gallery> |
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+ | Sea_star.jpg|A sea star in real life. |
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+ | </gallery> |
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+ | {{Seafloor}} |
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[[Category:Benthic]] |
[[Category:Benthic]] |
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+ | [[Category:January Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:February Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:March Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:April Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:May Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:June Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:July Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:August Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:September Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:October Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:November Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
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+ | [[Category:December Deep-Sea Collectables]] |
Revision as of 03:05, 2 May 2018
- "I got sea star! Is a group called a constellation?" —New Leaf
The sea star is a benthic animal found at the bottom of the sea. It is indicated by a small circular shadow. Diving is the only way of capturing it.
Donation to the museum
In New Leaf
In New Leaf, an information board in the aquarium will list information about this creature.
"These star-shaped creatures have hundreds of tiny feet attached to their mobile arms. This allows them to slowly walk and open shellfish for food, making them effective predators. If an arm gets caught and ripped off by another predator, the sea star's arm will just grow back. Some sea stars eat by extending their stomachs out of their mouths to trap and then digest prey."
Encyclopedia Information
New Leaf
Deep-Sea Creature
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Encyclopedia Information
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Gallery
Further information
- Main article: Sea star on Wikipedia
Certonardoa semiregularis has no common (English) name. Its Japanese name is アカヒトデ literally meaning red starfish. Parasitic snails live on the starfish. This species is distributed in south Honshu in Southeast Asia. Most starfish have five arms that radiate from a central disc, but the number varies with the group.
Deep-Sea Creatures | ||
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