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Description
Nudibranchs are mollusks in the class Gastropoda, which includes snails, slugs, limpets, and sea hairs. Many gastropods
have a shell. Nudibranchs have a shell in their larval stage, but it
disappears in the adult form. Gastropods also have a foot and all young
gastropods undergo a process called torsion
in their larval stage. In this process, the entire top of their body
twists 180 degrees on their foot. This results in the placement of the
gills and anus above the head, and adults that are asymmetrical in form.
The word nudibranch comes from the Latin word nudus (naked) and Greek brankhia
(gills), in reference to the gills or gill-like appendages which
protrude from the backs of many nudibranchs. They also may have
tentacles on their heads that help them smell, taste, and get around. A
pair of tentacles called rhinophores
on the nudibranch's head have scent receptors that allow the nudibranch
to smell its food or other nudibranchs. Because the rhinophores stick
out and can be a target for hungry fish, most nudibranchs have the
ability to withdraw the rhinophores and hide them in a pocket in their
skin if the nudibranch senses danger.
Species
There are over 3,000 species of nudibranchs, and new species
are still being discovered. They range in size from microscopic to over
a foot and a half long and can weigh up to just over 3 pounds. If
you've seen one nudibranch, you haven't seen them all. They come in an
astonishingly wide variety of colors and shapes—many have brightly
colored stripes or spots and flamboyant appendages on their head and
back. Some species are transparent and/or bio-luminescent, like the Phylliroe.
Nudibranchs thrive in an enormous variety of underwater environments,
from shallow, temperate, and tropic reefs to Antarctica and even
hydrothermal vents.
Suborders
Two main suborders of nudibranchs are dorid nudibranchs (Doridacea) and aeolid nudibranchs (Aeolidida). Dorid nudibranchs, like the Limacia cockerelli, breathe through gills that are on their posterior (back) end. Aeolid nudibranchs have cerata or
finger-like appendages that cover their back. The cerata can be a
variety of shapes—thread-like, club-shaped, clustered, or branched. They
have multiple functions, including breathing, digestion, and defense.
Habitat and Distribution
Nudibranchs are found in all the world's oceans, from cold water to warm water. You might find nudibranchs in your local tide pool, while snorkeling or diving on a tropical coral reef, or even in some of the coldest parts of the ocean or in thermal vents.
They live on or near the sea floor and have been identified at depths between 30 and 6,500 feet below the ocean surface.
Diet
Most Nudibranchs eat using a radula,
a toothed structure that they use to scrape off prey from the rocks
they cling to; some suck out the prey after predigesting its tissue with
selected enzymes, rather like a wasp. They are carnivorous, so that
prey includes sponges,
coral, anemones, hydroids, barnacles, fish eggs, sea slugs, and other
nudibranchs. Nudibranchs are picky eaters—individual species or families
of nudibranchs may eat only one kind of prey. Nudibranchs get their
bright colors from the food they eat. These colors may be used for
camouflage or to warn predators of the poison that lies within.
The Spanish shawl nudibranch (Flabellina iodinea) feeds on a species of hydroid called Eudendrium ramosum, which possesses a pigment called astaxanthin that gives the nudibranch its brilliant purple, orange, and red coloration.
Some nudibranchs, like the Blue Dragon, create their own food by
eating coral with algae. The nudibranch absorbs the algae's chloroplasts
(zooxanthellae) into the cerata, which acquire nutrients by photosynthesis
using the sun to sustain the nudibranch for months. Others have evolved
other ways of farming zooxanthellae, housing them in their digestive
gland.
Behavior
The sea slugs can see light and dark, but not their own brilliant
coloration, so the colors are not intended to attract mates. With their
limited vision, their sense of the world is obtained through their
rhinophores (on top of the head) and oral tentacles (near the mouth).
Not all nudibranchs are colorful; some use defensive camouflage to match
the vegetation and hide, some can change their colors to fit, some hide
their bright colors only to bring them out to warn off predators.
Nudibranchs move on a flat, broad muscle called a foot, which leaves a
slimy trail. While most are found on the ocean floor, some can swim
short distances in the water column by flexing their muscles. Some even
swim upside down.
Aeolid nudibranchs can use their cerata for defense. Some of their
prey such as Portuguese man-of-wars have a specialized cell in their
tentacles called nematocysts that contain a barbed or venomous coiled
thread. Nudibranchs eat the nematocysts and store them in the
nudibranch's cerata where they can be used late to sting predators.
Dorid nudibranchs make their own toxins or absorb toxins them from their
food and release those into the water when needed.
Despite the unsavory or toxic taste they can present to their
non-human predators, most nudibranchs are harmless to humans, except
those like Glaucus atlanticus which consumes nematocytes and so may consider you a predator and sting.
Reproduction and Offspring
Nudibranchs are hermaphrodites, meaning that they have reproductive
organs of both sexes. Because they can't move too far, too fast and are
solitary in nature, it's important for them to be able to reproduce if
the situation presents itself. Having both sexes means that they can
mate with any adult that happens to pass by.
Nudibranchs lay masses of spiral-shaped or coiled eggs, which are for
the most part left on their own. The eggs hatch into free-swimming
larvae which eventually settle onto the ocean bottom as adults. Only one
species of nudibranch, the Pteraeolidia ianthina, exhibits parental
care by guarding the newly-laid egg masses.
Nudibranchs and Humans
Scientists study nudibranchs
because of their complex chemical makeup and adaptations. They have
rare or novel chemical compounds which possess anti-microbial and
anti-parasitic traits which may aid in the fight against cancer.
Studies of nudibranch DNA also offer assistance in tracking ocean conditions relative to climate change.
Threats
These beautiful animals don't live very long; some live up to a year,
but some only for a few weeks. The global population of nudibranchs is
currently unassessed—researchers are still discovering new ones each
year—but field observations such as that conducted by Endangered Species International
suggest that many species are becoming rare, due to water pollution,
degradation, habitat loss, and biodiversity decline associated with
global warming.
Source: https://www.thoughtco.com/facts-about-nudibranchs-2291859
:o)
Global warming/climate change/climate disruption is a fraud. I'm a marine biologist. I know many fraudulent marine biologists. And many of these idiots don't even know they're doing it. The earth fluctuates, animal populations fluctuate, weather fluctuates. It's been going on for millions of years. This fraud is all part of the Agenda 21 Globalization. You'll be a subject, and a small group of elites will rule you and everyone else you know. When some jackass says the nudibranchs are susceptible to global warming, it indicates that he's in need of a new research grant.
ReplyDeleteOr maybe they should ask Greta's parents to fund it! You are SO right - our climate has been changing for eons!
ReplyDelete