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Starfish Have No Brain and No Blood — and They Work Just Fine

March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

The Fact

Starfish have no brain and no blood; they pump seawater through their bodies as a hydraulic circulatory system.

An Animal That Runs on Seawater

Most animals with a circulatory system pump a specialized fluid — blood — through a network of vessels to deliver oxygen and nutrients to cells and remove metabolic waste. The starfish (class Asteroidea) does not have blood in any conventional sense. Instead, it uses a water vascular system: a network of fluid-filled canals that draws in filtered seawater through a structure called the madreporite (a sieve-like plate visible as a small pale spot on the starfish's upper surface) and distributes it through a system of canals to hundreds of tube feet on the animal's lower surface.

These tube feet — small, flexible extensions that end in sucker-like pads — are the starfish's primary organs of locomotion, prey capture, and chemosensory detection. They extend and contract through hydraulic pressure from the water vascular system. When pressure in the ampulla (a small bulb connected to the tube foot) increases, the tube foot extends. When it decreases, the tube foot retracts. Coordinating hundreds of tube feet to produce directional movement involves a distributed nervous system rather than a central brain.

A Nervous System Without a Brain

The starfish nervous system consists of a nerve ring surrounding the central mouth, with radial nerve cords extending down each arm. There is no central processing unit — no brain, no ganglion that acts as a command center. Behavioral decisions emerge from the decentralized interaction of sensory inputs and reflexive responses distributed across the entire body.

At the tip of each arm, a small structure called the eye spot can detect light direction but not form — sufficient to allow the starfish to orient toward or away from light sources. Chemoreceptors distributed across the tube feet detect chemical gradients, guiding the starfish toward prey. Mechanoreceptors detect touch and pressure.

The coordination of movement across all arms is managed through the nerve ring, which acts as a signaling loop rather than a control center. Each arm can function semi-independently; if one arm encounters a food stimulus, it exerts dominance over the others through the nerve ring, leading the whole animal toward the food. Research has shown that there is typically one "leading arm" during locomotion, but this role can shift to another arm depending on the direction of travel.

Digestion Outside the Body

One of the starfish's most unusual biological features is its method of feeding, which is made possible precisely by the absence of a fixed internal digestive architecture. When a starfish encounters a bivalve prey item such as a mussel or clam, it wraps its arms around the shell and pulls it open using the collective suction of hundreds of tube feet, exerting a sustained force that can overcome the adductor muscle holding the shell shut.

It then does something remarkable: it everts its stomach out through its mouth and inserts it into the narrow gap between the shell halves, directly into the prey's body cavity. Digestive enzymes are secreted directly onto the prey's soft tissues, breaking them down externally before the partially digested material is drawn back into the starfish along with the stomach. This external digestion means the starfish can consume prey items far too large to fit through its small mouth.

Regeneration: The Other Extraordinary Capability

The starfish's lack of a central nervous system has another consequence that strikes many people as equally remarkable: the ability to regenerate lost arms, and in some species to regenerate an entire animal from a single arm with a small portion of the central disc. Starfish shed arms deliberately as a defensive response (autotomy) and regrow them over a period of weeks to months.

Some species in the genera Linckia and Ophiactis take this further, reproducing asexually by deliberately fragmenting themselves, with each fragment growing into a complete individual. This makes them among the most regeneratively capable animals in the ocean — a biological capability that depends on having a decentralized body plan where the loss of any particular component does not lead to immediate systemic failure.

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FactOTD Editorial Team

Published March 28, 2026 · 4 min read

The FactOTD editorial team researches and verifies every fact before publication. Our mission is to make learning effortless and accurate. Learn about our process →

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