The Humble Urchin

Each month our teams write a blog about the special places they look after. Here, Kate Lock, Marine environmental assessment officer, talks about the humble urchin and why it is so important.

It is spherical in shape and blue, pink or purple in colour. It has an outer layer of skeletal plates that join together to form a shell urchin at skomerarranged in five rays. The shell is covered in hundreds of sharp mobile spines and along each ray are rows of hydraulic tube feet each ending in a sucker disc. It also has a complex dental apparatus which operates five jaws that project from the mouth.

One could be easily mistaken to believe that an alien species has just landed from space, however this is simply describing the ‘Common Sea urchin’ Echinus esculentus found all around the British Coast.

Super grazers

Sea urchins are the ‘rabbits’ of the marine world - feeding on seaweeds and encrusting animals, efficiently hoovering the rock surface bare.

By efficiently vacuuming rock surfaces bare they make space for larvae of different species to settle on the rock and, as a result, help boost diversity in the marine environment.  

Marine curios collection triggers voluntary marine reserve

Sea urchins were collected from Pembrokeshire during the 1960’s and 70’s as diving became popular. The animal was removed from the shell, bleached and dried to keep or sell as a souvenir.

Sites around Skomer Island were heavily targeted, and concerns grew about the ecological effects of the apparent over collection. This triggered the first suggestions that there was a need to conserve the marine area surrounding the island, and by 1971 a marine reserve was proposed by a group of naturalists and biologists from the Field Studies Council.

Between 1979 to 1982 urchin surveys were carried out by the Underwater Conservation Society (now the Marine Conservation Society) at a small number of Skomer sites to determine its densities. 

The results showed that the numbers were similar to commercially exploited populations in Devon, and lower than those from other non-exploited areas around the UK. Luckily collecting of marine curios in the UK stopped in the early 1980’s.

Volunteer diver urchin surveys

The first urchin survey (since the designation of the Skomer Marine Conservation Zone) was completed in 2003.

Fixed survey sites were established with a range of habitats and depths along the north and south coasts of the island and the north coast of the mainland.

We continue to carry out this survey every four years with a team of volunteer divers. The efforts of the volunteer diving teams are incredibly valuable because we can survey a vast area over 2 weekends. Gathering data about urchin distribution, abundance and size.

In June this year 40 volunteer divers covered 8400m2 and measured 949 urchins. This valuable data will be entered and analysed in the winter and compared to previous survey results.

Long-term monitoring provides evidence on state of the natural environment

The Skomer MCZ is home to the most comprehensive marine species and community monitoring programme in the UK. divers at Skomer

Concerns about the humble urchin kick started marine protection around Skomer Island, and 48 years later the Skomer Marine Conservation Zone (MCZ) can boast to be one of the most intensively studied marine area in the UK. 

The urchin survey is just one of a programme of marine monitoring projects undertaken at Skomer MCZ. We also monitor the weather and water conditions like sea temperature, which influence the wildlife of the site. Our biological programme gathers evidence and information on life on the shores and underwater allowing us to report on the health of the marine environment.

The Skomer MCZ team produce a Monitoring project status report annually with detailed results of all the monitoring projects completed - https://cdn.naturalresources.wales/media/688024/eng-report-251-skomer-mcz-project-status-report-2017-18.pdf

Find out more about the area and how you can visit on our website, you can also follow Kate and the team on Facebook.

Explore more

Newsletter sign up

Sign up to receive monthly updates from Natural Resources Wales