Tuesday, July 28, 2020

And the bryozoan eaters

Nothing grows in isolation. There are layers upon layers.

On a blade of kelp, a map of bryozoan colonies provides habitat for dorid sea slugs, nudibranchs. They break into the little zooid boxes and scrape out the animal inside. They are well camouflaged: their bodies are transparent, with white lines that mimic the white walls of the bryozoans.

With the naked eye, all I could see were pinhead bumps on the bryozoans. I searched for them with the microscope and found a half dozen, busily feeding.

This is the bryozoan colony, without dorids. Each little box is about 0.4 mm long.

A dorid, outlined by reflections from the 'scope's lights. About 2 mm. long.

There are two almost identical species of these tiny nudibranchs; Corambe pacifica and Doridella steinbergi. Only with a higher-power microscope could I tell the difference. But the two species happily live together on the same colonies.

A smaller one. The white markings are visible here.

A larger dorid, more visible on hydroids. This is probably the Corambe pacifica, aka the frost spot nudibranch.

This one shows a few yellowish spots.

Even with the microscope, these are often hard to see. Unless they're moving. I probably missed quite a few; there can be up to 240 dorids on one blade of kelp.

And this I didn't know yesterday, when I posted photos of the bryozoan colonies; the bryozoans respond to predation by these nudibranchs by building spines on the top of their walls. Here's yesterday's photo, with the spines, that I didn't recognize when I saw them.

"Keep off!"

Tomorrow, I'll have a video of these crawling about.

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Nada vive solito. La naturaleza viene con capas. Encima del alga "kelp", existen las colonias de briozoos; encima de los briozoos, se deslizan los nudibranquios, animales del grupo de caracoles y babosas; como caracoles marinas sin concha. Se alimentan de los zooides, rompiendo sus cajitas. Tienen exelente camuflage, siendo transparentes y con lineas blancas que se parecen a las paredes de los briozoos.

Con el ojo solo, apena podía ver unos pequeñísimos protuberancias sobre las colonias de briozoos. Cuando los busqué con el microscopio, encontré una media docena.

Las cajitas de los briozoos miden aproximadamente 0.4 mm. de largo. Los nudibranquios (aka doris) miden desde 2 mm. de largo.

Hay dos especies que viven en estos briozoos; Corambe pacifica y Doridella steinbergi. Son casi idénticos, pudiendo identificarse únicamente por la formación del ano, lo cual no es posible con mi microscopio. Sin embargo, las dos especies viven juntas, así que las fotos aquí pueden representar ambas.

Es muy difícil verlos cuando son tan pequeños, a menos de que estén caminando. Probablemente se me escaparon varios; en una hoja de kelp pueden vivir unos 240 doris.

Y esto no lo sabía ayer cuando subí las fotos: los zooides de la colonia de los briozoos se defienden del ataque de los nudibranquios construyendo espinas encima de sus paredes. Volví a subir la foto donde se ven estas espinas. Ayer no supe que eran.

Mañana, subo un video.








2 comments:

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