Showing posts with label Nudibranchs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nudibranchs. Show all posts

Thursday, May 15, 2008

incredible nudibranch pictures

Awesome new posting!

Check out this link all you nudibranch fans….

http://ngm.nationalgeographic.com/2008/06/nudibranchs/doubilet-photography

Thursday, January 17, 2008

Bon soong Nudies



Here’s some nudibranchs I caught fooling around on top of the Bon soong wreck!
I’m a nerd for small creatures but unlike Paul, Klaus and Marcel I couldn’t tell you this ones name…


-ED. Note – Chromodoris geminus (?)


Saturday, October 20, 2007

Really Cool Picture of nudibranch

Here’s one for the nerds!

Check this out. Very cool stuff…

Sunday, June 24, 2007

Khao Lak Diving – Bon soong


Just saw this one in our library and thought I’d put it out here for all to see.

This is a lovely example of chromodoris annulata or for the more nerdy – Chromi’s.

These are really beautiful, and often quite easy to see. Due to their bright colors.

This is most frequently seen on Nudi Wall on Bon Soong wreck and can often be seen from several meters away.

Thursday, May 10, 2007

Khao Lak Diving – Deep Sea Porn!!!

In thee lonely times with the weather turning sour and Karin gone – I find myslef drawn to more and more deviant things…so today I busted out ye olde Nudi pictures and was shocked – shocked! I forgot exactly how dirty the guys are!

All Nudibranchs are Hermaphroditic, so they can actually go at it from both ends at the same time!!!

Here are three of them going nuts! And you thought that sea slugs were boring? heck no…and they skip the foreplay and just go right at it….


They are also love ’em and leave ’em types…plenty of single mothers/fathers here! They’ll drop a load of eggs like this….

They lay them in really nice outward spirals and then…wander off to do it all again! Shocking!!!

This is a nice picture of a Nudi-rose. This is actually the egg spiral from a Pleurobranch, a much larger species. They are pretty cool and flow back and forth in the surges.



Of course you can come see all this naughtiness in person …www.wickeddiving.com

or better yet book a liveaboard to see several sites like these…www.liveaboardguide.com



 

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Similan Marine Life – Nudibranchs

Flabellina, chromodoris, halgerda, ovulide; just to name a few of some of the   weirdest, intriguing and highly evolved creatures of the ocean, and yet creatures which even those of us who spend a third of our waking day under the sea still know so little about.  Last week, during a night dive at Koh Tachai North reef I came face to face with something which I was unable to identify.  I had absolutely no idea what it was.  It was about fifteen centimeters in length, dark red in colour and appeared to be a kind of unshelled mollusk moving with impressive rapidity.  My customers were as equally mesmerized.   This is rare as usually guests seem to want to see either ‘action’ or ‘big things’, and this malleable blob fell into neither category.  Back on the boat I consulted the underwater bible to the ‘dark side’, Helmut Debelius’s Field Guide to Nudibranchs and Sea Snails.  Page 153 revealed the pleurobranchus forskali, which is a type of notaspidea or sidegill slugs.  The passage includes the following rather disturbing description:

These slugs are grazing carnivores, feeding on sponges, tunicates, and other sessile invertebrates.
 

The passage also mentions that they are ‘voracious predators’ who use their ‘strong jaws’ to ‘feed on a variety of large prey’ and they eat each other.  This seems particularly vicious as despite moving faster than most other slugs, ‘fast’ for a slug is still an excruciatingly ‘slow’ pace in which to be eaten.  In the past I have witnessed a type of gymnodoris munching away at a fellow slug – head first.  This order of courses actually made me wonder whether the ‘eaten’ managed to steal a few retaliatory bites from the ‘eater’ first?  Or perhaps it was a self defense mechanism on the part of the ‘eater’ to make sure that the ‘eaten’ didn’t turn around to join in the meal.  Either way, this detail along with the description below is an attempt to pull the reader towards the incredible and addictive world of the ‘dark side’; rather than diving to see big fish (which you would need to be blind to miss), search instead for the slugs of the sea. 

Now for the Clever Part

In the sea, slugs can generally be catergorised as either snails or ‘nudibranchs’, which literally means ‘naked gills’ in reference to the bushy plume on their bodies through which they breathe.  So far about 11,000 species have been identified, (and this does not include the glorious family of flatworms, which will require a whole other article!)  Due to their often individual markings, and ability to take on the colorings and even shapes of their food, they are very tricky to identify.  However, this hasn’t stopped me from scouring the nudibranch bible and to no avail deciding that I simply must have ‘discovered’ a previously undiscovered slug. 

Now what is really remarkable is how nudibranchs have evolved out of their shell, and in the case of the flabellina  pteraeolidia ianthina, evolved out of the need to eat! (Commonly found on Richelieu Rock, Koh Tachai Pinnacle, Elephant Head Rock) The removal of the shell has been achievable through the development of a new line of defense – stinging cells which are ingested from prey (which  includes stinging hydroids, sea anemones and the spawn of other nudibranchs).  The cells are either stored in defense glands along their bodies or secreted.  These chemicals are frequently toxic or distasteful, and therefore not a top food choice for a hungry fish.  However, their cryptic patterning also helps to make them nearly invisible, which is not just a challenge to the recreational diver to identify, but also for predators to find.  If they are spotted then their bright colouring reminds fish of their inedible qualities. 

Fortunately, the chances of nudibranchs being eaten before they die of old age are not so high as they have an incredibly short life span, from as little   as three weeks.  This means that reproduction needs to be efficient and needs to be speedy.  Consequently, when they are not busy eating one another, a nudibranch can mate with another member of the species with surprising ease because they are hermaphroditic; they are both male and female. Apparently, they ‘can rarely fertilize themselves’ but just entertaining the notion that there is a small possibility is pretty astounding.  When sperm  sacs are exchanged the eggs are deposited in a colourful spiral, often on top of their favorite food.  This nutritious start to life is used to its full advantage by certain types of facelinidae, which feed on algae rich hydroid coral.  They algae is actually ‘farmed’ and then stored for photosynthetic nutrient production, meaning that the algae is able to grow and multiple within the nudibranch’s tissues and it need never eat again!

Ultimately, the moral of this story is: next time your dive guide shows you a blob -get excited. Oh and watch out for those spearing textile cone shells…