Abstract
Two tests of the holasteroid echinoid Hemipneustes striatoradiatus (Leske) from the type area of the Maastrichtian Stage (Upper Cretaceous) bear a varied infestation of episkeletozoans (oysters, bryozoan colony, and serpulids), borings (probable Caulostrepsis isp., Oichnus simplex Bromley), surface abrasion (Gnathichnus? isp.), and pits (O. excavatus Donovan and Jagt). Only O. excavatus represents a premortem infestation. In one specimen, the four individual pits of this ichnospecies are each associated with a different ambulacrum and pore pairs that, in life, bore respiratory tube feet; the anterior ambulacrum, of different gross morphology, is not infested. In the second test, three out of four of the same ambulacra are infested, although there are also O. excavatus in the interambulacra. The association between O. excavatus and the ambulacra of the echinoid, and thus its tube feet, is open to several plausible explanations, but most likely provided some form of feeding or protective advantage to the pit-forming organism.
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