Gray named the regular sea urchin genus Arbacia (family Arbaciidae, order Arbacioida) in 1835. According to Agassiz (1842) and Mortensen (1935), Arbacia was a "nonsensical" name for a sea urchin genus. Harvey (1956) gave the most plausible explanation for the name, considering it a derivation of Arbaces, a secondary character in the historical poem Sardanapalus by Lord Byron, which was published in 1821, a few years before Gray's work. Arbacia is a small genus well known from Miocene age (Smith, 2005). All the members of this genus show morphological similarities (Mortensen, 1943). The test, formed from regularly arranged plates, is rather stout, flattened below, and gently domed above. The test has primary spines and tubercles; secondary spines are absent in the genus (Tortonese, 1965). The spines are moderate to long in length, often showing size and shape pattern differences with reference to body regions. In particular, those nearest to the mouth have enameled flattened tips. On the aboral side, there are usually conspicuous naked areas in the upper portions of the interambulacra. A large, more or less soft and membranous peristome, with an undulating edge characterizes the genus. The peristome may be naked, but it usually has small spines and pedicellariae and contains embedded plates that support the buccal podia. The periproct is largely covered by four subtriangular and subequal plates. The apical system has four large periproctal plates forming an anal valve. The size of Arbacia species ranges from approximately 15 to 50 mm in diameter (test without spines). The various species of Arbacia are usually colored uniformly, most commonly green, brown, purple, or black. Arbacia species occur in tropical, temperate, and sub-Antarctic zones. Six species of Arbacia have been described by Mortensen (1943):