Showing posts with label orange striped green anemone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label orange striped green anemone. Show all posts

Sunday, November 13, 2022

Made me happy Part 2

Here's another handful of photos from my "Things that make me Happy" folder. Again, in no particular order, chosen almost at random from the file.

Oyster Bay. Bird houses on poles, muddy tide flats with busy birdies, calm water.

What's left of an old log in the little Oyster Bay woods. With lichens, mosses, and lichen agaric mushrooms, Lichenomphalia umbellifera. Which is really part of a lichen, with its associated alga, Coccomyxa spp.

Orange-striped green anemone, Diadumene lineata, installed in an abandoned snail shell. One the hermits won't get to use.

I love these little floating puddle-jumpers, so essential to contact with many of our Vancouver Island communities. A Cessna Skywagon.

The forest in fog and snow.

The old beaver lodge. I visit several times a year, and have never seen a beaver yet. Their tracks in the mud, yes.

Tartan Dahlia

More tomorrow.

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Sigo subiendo fotos de mi carpeta de "Cosas que me hacen feliz". Otra vez, escogidas casi al azar.

  1. La lagunita de Oyster Bay, con los nidos de pájaros encima de postes, la zona intramareal llena de lodo y de pajaritos felices, patos y gaviotas en la distancia.
  2. Un tronco caído, ya muy viejo, sosteniendo líquenes, musgos, y esos honguitos Lichenomphalia umbellifera, los cuales son, en realidad, una parte de un líquen, en conjunto con una alga Coccomyxa spp..
  3. Una anémona verde con rayas anaranjadas, Diadumene lineata, que se ha instalado en una concha de caracol marino. Esta no la podrán usar los ermitaños.
  4. Una avioneta con flotadores Cessna Skywagon. Me encantan estos avioncitos, tan trabajadores, tan necesarios para nuestras comunidades isleñas aisladas.
  5. El bosque con nieve en la neblina.
  6. La madriguera de los castores.  Visito esta madriguera varias veces al año y nunca he visto un solo castor. Sus huellas en el lodo, sí los he encontrado. Y cada vez ha crecido la madriguera.
  7. Una dalia, llamado "Tartan". El nombre en náhuatl: atlcocotlixochitl. (Acabo de descubrir esto; me gusta. Otra cosa que me hace feliz.)
Y mañana subo más.


Thursday, August 12, 2021

Polly want a shrimp pellet

Stuck at home with a gimpy knee, I've been trying to lure a long, fat polychaete worm out into the open, so as to get her* photo. I caught her the other day near the glass wall of the aquarium, gorging herself on shrimp pellets.

Ragworm, aka king ragworm, Alitta virens, Nereis virens

I don't know when she arrived in my tank; I posted her photo a year ago, when she was a bit smaller. I think now she's about 8 to 10, or maybe more inches long. And very hungry; she gulps down huge mouthfuls of shrimp pellets and nibbles on green algae.

She didn't use to extend herself out of the sand cover more than an inch or two, but now that she's grown, she commonly reaches out 4 or 5 inches, retracting instantaneously with any movement nearby.

Her face is bluish, has an assortment of tentacles and palps, and four eyes. I've been trying to get a clear shot at the face; I'll keep trying.

Another, still a youngster. The tank can support several as long as I feed them regularly.

And while I'm looking at tentacly critters, here are a couple more:

Tiny anemone, showing the stripes on her tentacles.

Orange-striped green anemone, Diadumene lineata

* I named her Polly last year, since she is a polychaete worm. And with the name, Polly, goes a female pronoun.


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Condenada a permanecer en casa debido a una rodilla dañada, me he ocupado en tratar de atraer un anélido poliqueto para que salga de sus túneles debajo de la arena y presentarse cerca de la pared del acuario para que pueda sacarle una foto. La capturé el otro dia hartándose de pastillitas de camarón.

Primera foto: "Polly" (por su clasificación como poliqueto) Alitta virens, aka Nereis virens.

No sé cuando llegó al acuario: le saqué fotos hace un año cuando era todavía pequeña.Creo que ahora mide de 15 a 20 cm, o tal vez más. Y tiene mucha hambre. Abre la boca al diámetro completo del cuerpo para tragar pastillas de camarón; también come algas verdes.

Antes, no salía de la arena más que unos 2 cm, pero ahora se extiende hasta 10  cm o más, buscando comida. Si percibe algún movimiento, se retrae instantáneamente.

La cara es azul, con una variedad de tentáculos y palpos, y con cuatro ojos. Seguiré tratando de sacarle una foto de la cara.

Segunda foto: otro poliqueto; un joven. El tanque puede sostener varios, mientras les sigo dando de comer.

Y mientras estoy mirando a criaturas con tentáculos, aquí hay dos más:

Tercera foto: anémona con manchas blancas en los tentáculos.

Cuarta foto: anémona verde con rayas anaranjadas, Diadumene lineata.



Friday, April 30, 2021

Tasty lunch!

It's feeding time in the aquarium:

Waiting:

An orange-striped green anemone in an abandoned snail shell.

Just smelled lunch:

Extending the tips of the tentacles. With small, excited hermit, antenna on high, and copepods.

Chowing down:

And stretched out, tentacles waving; there's shrimp dust in the water.

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Es la hora de comer en el acuario: una anémona Diadumene lineata, la anémona de mar verde con rayas anaranjadas, descansando, luego extendiendo la punta de unos tentáculos cuando le llega el olor a comida, y finalmente, hinchada a lo máximo, con todos los tentáculos ocupados en capturar los fragmentos de camarón en polvo.

También presentes, un ermitaño pequeño, agitando su antena, y varios copépodos.


Sunday, February 21, 2021

Did Terry Pratchett watch barnacles?

Searching for one thing, I stumble upon so many distractions! Like these tiny aquarium residents, seen while I looked for snail fur.

Miniature orange-striped green anemone, Diadumene lineata

This was taken under the microscope, hiding in a dimple in a small snail shell. One of many, almost invisible to the naked eye. And each one, as I watched, never stopped moving, swelling, shrinking, waving, closing and opening the tentacles.

Another barnacle.

Feeding barnacles have their own special form of camouflage. They spread out their cirri (those modified legs), sweep them through the water, pull them back, close, open, spread out the cirri again ....  Say you're a fish, wanting a mouthful of barnacle legs; just wait and catch them open. Or a watcher with a camera; should be easy, right?

But no: the barnacles have no rhythm. Just when you think they should be opening — now! — and press the shutter, they hold back a half-second. The next sweep is just a tad early. Then a toe sticks out, right on time, but the pesky critter aborts the sweep. The fish goes hungry. I am stubborn, but mostly, I give up, too.

Was this where Terry Pratchett got his idea for Vetinari's clock?
The clock in Lord Vetinari’s anteroom didn’t tick right. Sometimes the tick was just a fraction late, sometimes the tock was early. Occasionally, one or the other didn’t happen at all. This wasn’t really noticeable until you’d been in there for five minutes, by which time small but significant parts of the brain were going crazy. [Going Postal by Terry Pratchett]

Tiny, tiny, really tiny shrimp-like thing.

This little critter kept dashing across the shell under the microscope. The head on the right is of one of the isopods that I found a couple of weeks ago; they measure about 2 to 3 mm. long. That makes the little shrimp thing a bit under 1 mm. long.

The inner tube of the large moon snail shell, against the backdrop of the outer shell. (Camera)

Here you have to look closely; along the edge of that tube, the worms that are everywhere on this shell, stand up against the green background, each one spreading its two tentacles out into the water. On the far right, the tentacles belong to another of the orange-striped green anemones.

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Cuando ando buscando alguna cosa cualquiera, ¡se me presentan tantas distracciones! Como estos pequeñas criaturas que viven en mi acuario, que vi mientras buscaba pelo de caracol.

Primera foto: una anémona Diadumene lineata, la de las rayas anaranjadas. Esta la vi bajo el microscopio, escondida en un hoyuelo en una concha de caracol. Una de muchas, todas casi invisibles bajo el ojo sin ayudas. Y cada una, mientras observaba, nunca dejó de moverse, hinchándose, contrayéndose, agitando los tentáculos, abriendo y cerrándolos.

Segunda foto: otro bálano. Los bálanos que están buscando sus alimentos tienen su forma muy personal de camuflaje. Estiran sus cirros (esas patas modificadas), peinan el agua, vuelven a encerrar los cirros, cierran, abren, estiran los cirros ... y así siguen. Pon que eres un pescadito y se te antoja una mordida de esos cirros; solo hay que esperar a que estiran las patas y morder, ¿no? O que estás esperando con un cámara; fácil, ¿verdad?

Pero no. Los bálanos no siguen ningún ritmo. Justo cuando crees que se van a abrir —¡ahora! — e imprimes el botón de la cámara, se atrasan un medio segundo. La siguente apertura es un poquitito temprano. Luego se asoma el punto de un cirro, justo a tiempo, pero el animal infeliz se arrepiente y se vuelve a esconder. El pescadito se queda sin su antojo. Yo soy terca, pero casi siempre también me rindo.

¿Será aquí en donde el autor Terry Pratchett sacó la idea del reloj de Vetinari?

El reloj en la antesala del Señor Vetinari no hacía "tick" correctamente. A veces el "tick" ocurrió un segundo más tarde de lo debido, a veces el "tock" ocurría un poco temprano. de vez en cuando el uno o el otro ni siquiera salía. Esto no se hacía notar hasta que hubieras estado esperando por cinco minutos; ya para entonces partes pequeñas pero importantes de tu cerebro se estaban volviendo locos. —"Going Postal" por Terry Pratchett.
Tercera foto: un animalito estilo camarón pequeñísimo. Este bichito nadaba rapidamente de un lado a otro del campo bajo el microscopio. La cabeza a la izquierda es de uno de los isópodos que observé hace unas semanas; estos miden unos 2 o 3 mm. de largo. Comparando los tamaños, el camaroncito medirá menos de 1 mm.

Cuarta foto: hay que mirarla de cerca. Es el poste central del caracol "luna" visto en frente de la capa interior de la misma concha. Si ves de cerca, puedes descubrir los gusanos de tubo que viven en todas partes en esta concha. Cada uno extiende sus dos tentáculos al agua. El grupo de tentáculos a la izquierda es otra de esas anémonas de rayas anaranjadas.


Friday, February 05, 2021

Green ropes and clumsy grabbers

Nothing in the biosphere is ever simple. It's all complicated, intertwined, inter-dependent, busy. Nothing is just one thing. Not even me, or you. Well, in some sense, you're a separate person, but really, you're (and I'm) a community, a city with billions of inhabitants. You wouldn't survive without your critters; they wouldn't survive without you.

You have to start somewhere. I'll start in my tank, with hermits. Hermits are messy eaters. They grab food with their pincers; awkward things, without the useful fingers and thumbs we have. Food gets transported to the first set of mouth appendages, spilling crumbs as it goes. These mini-hands break it up (spilling more, of course), and pass it on to the smaller mouth parts. And so it goes.

In the tank, I feed the hermits and crabs, and some of the larger anemones. And a busy community thrives because the hermits are messy eaters.

I was taking photos of the barnacles, trying to catch one with it's legs stretched out at full length. (They catch their food with those legs, remember.) I wasn't having much luck, but I processed a few of the photos and looked them over.

Barnacles in community

And there again, there are layers upon layers. And each layer has its story. 

The barnacles arrived on an oyster. Every now and then, I find on the beach a pile of empty oyster shells, usually up high above the tide line, sometimes near the remains of a bonfire. The leftovers of a human party? Or were they raccoons? It's usually too late to see tracks. A couple of times, in the pile, I've found a live oyster, forgotten by the diners. This one, in my tank, was one of those. It came with a planting of barnacles and mussels.

The oyster is a filter feeder. It brings in water from its surroundings (carrying with it fragments of hermit food), then spits it out, clamping the shell shut, then opening up again. The barnacles comb the water with their legs, catching smaller critters and hermit leftovers. The mussels filter the water, like the oyster does.

Look at the photo. Two barnacles are still alive. In the mouth of the one on the left, its coiled legs look like a roll of green rope.

Two barnacles are empty. Whelk snails bore through their armoured plates and eat the animal inside. In the few weeks the oyster has been here, half the barnacles have been eaten, as well as all but one of the mussels. The blue patch on the far left is an empty mussel shell.

Look again. on the sides of the barnacles, there are tiny tentacles reaching out into the water. These are two-tentacled tube worms. They somehow burrow into shells (barnacle, oyster, hermit crab, clam: any shell will do.) and reach out into the water with those two tentacles, capturing floating bits of food stuffs. I see four worms here. (The tangled fibers on the right are probably eelgrass roots.)

In front, a bit blurry, there's an orange-striped green anemone, also catching bits of hermit leftovers, and anything the oyster spat out.

And then, there's the sand. Not visible here, but certainly under a lens, there are crowds of amphipods, copepods, and yesterday's isopods, all busy keeping the sand clean.

And behind the anemone, on the left, look closely: there's a leg of one of the tinier hermits, the source, with his larger cousins, of most of the food the rest of the community harvests. Because they're messy eaters.

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Nada, nunca, en la biósfera es sencillo. Todo es complicado, enredado, complejo. Nada existe como una sola cosa. Ni tú, ni yo. En algún sentido, eres una sola persona, pero en verdad, eres (y soy) una comunidad, una ciudad con billones de habitantes. Sin tus comensales, no sobrevivirías; sin ti, ellos tampoco vivirían.

Hay que empezar en alguna parte. Yo empezaré hoy en mi acuario, con los cangrejos ermitaños. Los ermitaños son desordenados, descuidados. Agarran su comida con las pinzas, "manos" torpes, sin los dedos tan útiles que tenemos nosotros. Con ellas, mueven la comida hacia las primeras apéndices de la boca, dejando caer migajas en camino. Estas agarraderas rompen los pedazos de comida (tirando aún más) y los transportan a la tercera nivel del aparato bucal. Y así sigue.

En el tanque, les doy de comer a los cangrejos y ermitaños y al algunas de las anémonas más grandes. Y a base de eso, una comunidad amplia y variada vive, porque los ermitaños son descuidados.

Estaba sacando fotos de los bálanos, tratando de agarrar uno con sus cirros (patas) al agua, estirados a lo máximo. (Capturan su comida con esas patas.) Es difícil, y no me ayudó la suerte esta vez, pero abrí unas de las fotos y las examiné.

La foto: bálanos y su comunidad.

Y ahí, como siempre, had capas y capas. Y cada individuo tiene su historia.

Los bálanos llegaron aquí en un ostión. De vez en cuando, encuentro en la playa, bien arriba del nivel de la marea alta, a veces cerca de una vieja fogata, un montón de conchas vacías de ostiones. ¿Serán lo que dejaron un grupo de gente comiendo en la playa? O si no, ¿una familia de mapaches? Siempre ha sido demasiado tarde para encontrar huellas.

En unos de esos montones, he encontrado ostiones vivos, y los he traído a casa. El que ahora vive en mi tanque fue uno de estos. Llegó con su propia carga de bálanos y mejillones.

El ostión come filtrando el agua, capturando cualquier fragmento de comida que trae, y luego escupiendo lo demás, cerrando y abriendo su concha. En su lado, los bálanos cuelan el agua con sus cirros para capturar animalitos más pequeños y los restos de la comida de los ermitaños. Los mejillones filtran el agua, al igual que el ostión.

Miira la foto. Dos de los bálanos todavía viven. En la boca de aquel a la izquierda, se le ven los cirros, como una rueda de cuerdas verdes. 

Dos de los bálanos están vacíos. Los buccinos (caracoles carnívoros) taladran la concha y se comen el animal escondido adentro. En las pocas semanas que ha estado en el tanque el ostión, los caracoles han comido la mitad de los bálanos, y dejaron solo un mejillón con vida. La mancha azul a la izquierda es la concha vacía de un mejillón.

Mira otra vez. En los lados de los bálanos se ven unos tentáculos muy pequeños. Estos son tentáculos de gusanitos que viven en tubos; estos tienen dos tentáculos cada uno. De alguna manera, hacen agujeros en las conchas (cualquier concha; ostión, almeja, bálano, caracol; les da lo mismo), y de allí extienden sus tentáculos al agua, agarrando pedacitos de materia comestible. Aqí veo cuatro de estos gusanitos. (Las fibras enredadas a la derecha son raices de hierba zostera.)

Un frente, un poco borrosa, se ve una anémona de rayas anaranjadas, también ocupada en buscar comida flotante en el agua; los deshechos de los ermitaños y cualquier cosa que haya escupido el ostión.

Y queda la arena. No se ven aquí, pero si con una lente, se encontrarán muchos anfípodos, copépodos e isópodos como el de ayer, todos activamente limpiando la arena.

Y atrás de la anémona, a la izquierda; mira con cuidado; verás una pata de uno de los más pequeños de los ermitaños, el responsable, con la ayuda de todos sus primos, de proveer la mayoría de la comida de que vive la comunidad. Porque son tan descuidados.


Friday, January 15, 2021

Roaming anemones: an experiment

A month ago, I posted a photo of a hermit crab wearing an anemone on his shell. In the comments, Tim wondered how long a hermit had to sit still for an anemone to climb on board. I decided to do some experimentation.

Pink-tipped green anemones on broken moon snail shell. Dec., 2019

I scraped 8 small anemones off the wall of the aquarium, or off smooth shells (smooth, so as not to damage the anemones more than necessary), and placed them in a tray with shells nearby, then watched what they did.

Third batch: two pink-tipped, and one tiny (these are all tiny) orange-striped green anemone.

I put one pink-tipped down almost touching a shell. The other, I set beside a stone. Now watch:

Larger anemone expanding its base.

And moving away from the stone.

The anemones move by slowly expanding and shrinking. And they had definite preferences.

Medium anemone has chosen a different shell. Large one has cemented itself to the tray. So has the tiny orange-striped.

On one trial, an anemone managed to select a shell and glue itself down in 10 minutes. Another took 15 minutes. The slowest (one of the tiny orange-striped ones) took the better part of an hour. Average time, in 10 trials, about 40 minutes.

The largest of the anemones attached itself to the tray twice. Each time, I scraped it off and let it try again. It took longer on the second try; probably had a sore foot. The third time, instead of leaving it free, I dropped it inside a shell. It glued itself down quickly this time.

Loose in the shell, all hunkered down. Tired of this harassment.

An hour and a bit later, recovered, happy, feeding.

I noticed that the smaller pink-tipped anemones relocated and glued themselves down faster, possibly because I did less damage to them scraping them off their perches in the tank.

The orange-tipped green anemone, still upside-down after almost an hour, not bothered, it seems. In the tank they float around and attach themselves to everything; walls, shells, crabs, seaweeds, sand. Both of the ones I tried out took their time at settling.

Hermit crabs often sit still for long periods of time. Sleeping? Or just contemplating the universe? I don't know, but it's definitely enough time for a roaming anemone to move in.

Thanks for the idea, Tim!

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Hace un mes, subí una foto de un cangrejo ermitaño que llevaba en su concha una anémona. En los comentarios, Tim se preguntaba cuánto tiempo tomaría una anémona en adherirse a un ermitaño. Decidí hacer unos experimentos.

Desprendí 8 anémonas de las paredes y conchas más o menos lisas en el acuario, y los sumergí en agua limpia en una charola. A su lado, añadí unas conchas. Luego, con el reloj a la mano, observé los resultados.

Segunda foto: dos anémonas Anthopleura elegantissima, y unapequeña (como lo son todas estas) Diadumene lineata. Una de las dos la coloqué junto a una concha; la otra está cerca de una piedra. Ahora, mira lo que hacen:

Fotos 3, 4, 5: La más grande estira su base, y se aleja de la piedra, inflando y contrayéndose alternativamente.

Y tienen sus propias ideas de donde quieren ir. La mediana, escogió la concha que yo había dejado al lado. La grande se pegó al fondo de la charola. La desprendí, y se volvió a adherir otra vez al fondo.

En una de las pruebas una de las anémonas logró adherirse dentro de 10 minutos. Otra tomó 15. La más lenta (una de las miniaturas) tardó casi una hora. El tiempo promedio, en 10 pruebas fue de aproximadamente 40 minutos.

La que se pegó al fondo dos veces tomó más tiempo en la segunda prueba. Probablemente tendría un poco de malestar en la base, por haber sido desprendido dos veces. La tercera vez la puse dentro de una concha para asegurar que no tendría que despegarla otra vez. Allí, se estableció muy pronto. (Fotos 6 y 7.) Dentro de una hora, ya estaba abierta, feliz.

Noté que entre más pequeñas las anémonas Anthopleura, las que tienen los tentáculos color de rosa, más rapidamente se establecen, tal vez porque les hice menos daño al desprenderlas.

Foto #8: La pequeña Diadumene l., después de casi una hora, todavía volteada, pata arriba, sin preocuparse, parece. En el acuario, flotan y se adhieren a todo; las paredes, conchas, cangrejos, algas marinas, hasta la arena. Las dos que incluí en este experimento tomaron su  tiempo en asentarse.

Los cangrejos ermitaños muchas veces se quedan quietos por un buen tiempo. ¿Dormidos? ¿O contemplando el universo? Quien sabe, pero esto da más que suficiente tiempo para que una anémona peripatética se les adjunte.

¡Gracias por la idea, Tim!


Wednesday, August 05, 2020

Waiting

Caught in passing in the aquarium:

Orange-striped green anemone on eelgrass

... while I was waiting for a worm.

(Something has gone wrong with Blogger; it took half an hour just to add one photo. I'll deal with the worm tomorrow.)

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Visto al pasar, mientras esperaba que apareciera un anélido.

(Algo anda mal con Blogger: se tomó media hora para subir una sola foto. Dejaré el anélido hasta mañana.)

Wednesday, April 08, 2020

Leafy hornmouth and friends

Each critter that arrives in my aquarium, whether I brought it in on purpose, or it hitchhiked on seaweed or on a barnacle rock, or even if it was born in the tank, brings with it a responsibility. They each have their own specific diet to be provided, their own habitat needs; hiding spaces, climbing structures, sand or rocks, water currents and temperatures, company of their own sort. And providing those needs brings in more critters: the predators need prey, the gregarious ones need friends.

I don't know how the leafy hornmouth snail came to the tank. Maybe he arrived in a clump of mussels, brought in to feed the whelks. Or in a handful of seaweed. But he's here, and growing, (6.5 cm long now) and hungry. He eats barnacles and mussels, which means that I have to go shopping for barnacled rocks.

In between meals, he wanders around the glass walls.

Leafy hornmouth snail, Ceratostoma foliatum

Limpets travel on his back, and a family of orange-striped green anemones take advantage of the ever-changing currents; there's good eating in that water!

Foot and passengers

Spring is here. I guess I should be looking for a mate for him (or is it her? They know; I can't tell.)

One of the limpets. The yellowish blobs are limpet poop.

Empty snail shell with another orange-striped green anemone.

Next: leaving the tank behind and heading out into the forests again.

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Cada animal que llega a mi acuario, sea como sea que llegue, trae una responsabilidad. Cada uno tiene su dieta preferida, sus requistos para el habitat: necesitan lugares para esconderse, estructuras donde pueden trepar, arena o piedras, corrientes de agua rápidos o suaves, temperaturas específicas. Los animales de rapiña necesitan su presa natural; las criaturas gregarias necesitan compañeros.

Y al traer lo que piden los habitantes del tanque, vienen otros animales, con sus propias necesidades.

No sé como llegó el caracol "leafy hornmouth" al tanque. Tal vez se escondió entre un grupo de bálanos; tal vez vino en una bolsa de algas de mar, traídas para comida de los cangrejos y ermitaños. Pero aquí está, creciendo rápidamente; ya mide 6.5 centímetros de largo. Y tiene hambre.

Come bálanos, mejillones y almejas, lo que me obliga a traer piedras cubiertas de bálanos y de mejillones de la playa para mantenerlo sano.

Cuando termina de comer, anda dando vueltas en las paredes.

Las fotos: el caracol, con las anémonas que se aprovechan de una base móvil; así les toca mejor comida. Una lapa. Otras están pegadas a la parte trasera del caracol; este está comiendo algas en el vidrio. Las bolitas amarillentas son caca de lapa.

Y finalmente, una concha vacía con otra anémona (anémona verde con rayas anaranjadas: Diadumene lineata.)

(Y ya es primavera; quiere decir que el caracol estaría más contento (contenta? Yo no sé distinguir, pero ellos sí saben.) si le traigo una compañera. Otra visita a la playa cuando la marea está baja.)

Mañana; dejo el tanque y me voy otra vez al bosque.

Sunday, December 29, 2019

Micro beasties

I bought myself another microscope. A cheap one, for students, with low magnification, but like the even cheaper one I'd had a few years back (that didn't last long), with the ability to take photos. The one I had been using up to now was for my eyes only.

Tonight, I set it up and collected some stuff from my aquarium; a teaspoonful of sand, a fragment of seaweed, a few empty (or so I thought) shells, and one of the smaller hermit crabs. Arranged them on plastic lids, since they needed to be kept in water, shoved them under the 'scope, and tried to focus. It's a bit difficult when your target keeps running away; even the seaweed was carrying mini-critters on the move.

Pacific rose seaweed, Rhodymenia pacifica. With worm and snails.

This delicate (but oh, so durable in my tank) seaweed is a sheet with one layer of cells. Here, each cell is visible. The fragment was about 3 mm wide. The worm, that looked like a hair, but crawled about slowly, is about as wide as one seaweed cell. Even through the microscope, I didn't recognize the dark patches, but once I blew up the photo, I see that they're all snail shape. No wonder I always have a batch of new tiny snails climbing the walls!

Another snail. Shell only, abandoned in the sand.

This was in the teaspoon of sand. The snail shell is about as large as the larger sand grains. Still tiny. With everything under a film of water, the microscope LED lights produce glitter. I edited out what I could without destroying what is underneath, but the tiniest white specks are moving critters, all constantly in random motion, sort of like a swarm of midges. Some of the brighter patches of light were pulsating, squirming something-or-others. I managed to see a couple of worms and something with legs before they hid under the sand grains again. Some of the sand grains were bouncing; there was something busy underneath.

On an old cluster of empty barnacle shells, a colony of orange-striped green anemones has settled in.

One of my smaller hermit crabs.

I've been wanting to get a good look at these hermits for a while. They look like hairies (Pagurus hirsutiusculus), but never seem to grow up to the expected size. Maybe I'm not giving them enough time. This one certainly looks like a hairy; banded green antennae, blue marks on the legs. But those two rows of lumps on the pincer arm look interesting: I'll have to examine more of these little guys.

A couple of periwinkles.

And a tiny snail, half the size of the smallest periwinkle, on the move. With sand grains for size.
This is fun! Let it rain!


Monday, October 21, 2019

Mostly tentacled tinies

Still rescuing forgotten photos: these are from the aquarium. The tinies.

A barnacle, fishing.

I've long since forgotten what seaweed this came from. Just a snippet, zoomed as close as I could get.

Hydroids growing on a blade of old eelgrass. With one of the orange-clawed hermits, and a snail. Good eating on old eelgrass! The hermits usually clean all the hydroids and other growing things off overnight.

Orange-striped green anemone. In an empty barnacle shell.

Another orange-striper.

Down in the sand at the bottom, a tiny worm stretches up to the surface and unrolls it single tentacle.

When a snail shell is too old and broken to be useful to a hermit crab, the worms move in. I think these are the two-tentacled worms, and there are at least 6 living inside the shell.

Most of these were taken with the old Nikon and the 40 mm. lens, all but one (the snail) using flash with a now-defunct slave flash to even out the light. The slave no longer works, and the tank is now too scratched to permit a close-up. So all my recent photos have been deleted.

I need to buy a new tank and transfer everything there. Not an easy job, with a large colony of pink-tipped anemones attached to the glass of the present tank. A project for the grey and rainy months ahead.

Tuesday, April 09, 2019

Hermit in a new coat

Through the glass, darkly ...

A photo taken in passing, without scrubbing the glass wall of the aquarium first.

One of the smaller hermits, in a brand new shell. And an orange-striped green anemone in an old shell. And a heart.

I occasionally find a batch of small shells in a thrift or dollar store, bring them home, boil them in case of disease, dry them, boil them again, and donate them to my hermits. Sometimes they get used; only the hermits know which ones are acceptable and which ones aren't. It makes a change from the old, algae-coated, often broken (see the shell this hermit is climbing over), everyday batillaria shells that most of them are wearing.

Wednesday, April 11, 2018

Waste not ...

It's not only the hermit crabs who use leftover empty shells:

Orange-striped green anemones, Diadumene lineata, in empty barnacle shells.

These tiny anemones are quite mobile, and flit from wall to rock to shell to seaweed, always seeming to search for variety. Or maybe safety; these ones are staying put. No-one steps on them, no-one tries to push them aside.

Room with a view.


Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Over the hill

On the back side of the information kiosk on Mitlenatch Island, there were the animals we could hope to see.

Birds, mammals, intertidals, and a snake. Needs its own heading, doesn't it?

Over the top of the hill, we came to the caretakers' cabin. It's a ramshackle, half old lumber, half driftwood, half green walled home away from home. There's a rustic kitchen/storeroom/shower with a half roof, loose plank floor and rough wood shelves. There's an office/study/cold weather room, and a low-ceilinged bedroom. A brisk walk away, there's an open-air outhouse (private, if roofless), and a plastic john for rainy days.

From April to September, two people stay here, a week at a time, to watch for too-enthusiastic visitors and record the changes as the season rolls on. I hear there's a waiting list.

Old moon snail shell, on a tray of dried bones and cracked shells at the gate to the cabin.

One of this week's caretakers, Peggy, met us on the trail and filled us in on the latest news. The gulls on the north cliff were ready to lay their eggs; they should be starting the next day, and the eggs would be hatching in four weeks. On the cliffs over the water, they'd be a bit later. There was a dead seal (I think: my memory fails me here) down below the cabin, slightly nibbled on. She hoped to get permission to study it. And had we seen the tiger lily? (I hadn't; too busy taking photos of something else.)

Showing us the find. 

Camp Bay, from the caretaker's hill. That's the other half of our group in the dinghy, Dave the caretaker on the shore, and Peggy behind him in a blue jacket.

And then we were heading back across the hill to meet the dinghy and trade places with the seal watchers. But first, I had to climb down to a tide pool, take a few fast photos before I scrambled back up the rocks and ran to catch up with the group at the far shore.

The tide was almost in; I didn't see "cucumbers as big as my arm" as per the information kiosk. There were tiny snails, a few small hermits, limpet shells, and hiding in the cracks, a couple of crabs. And three orange-striped green anemones, Diadumene lineata. Made my day; I hadn't seen one of these since Boundary Bay days. The largest one is just below the rock, centre right edge.

I caught up to the group, out of breath, just as the dinghy came in. We boarded, Mike turned her around, and we puttered out to see cormorants and sea lions.

Tomorrow; the sea monsters, finally.

(6th in a series of 9 Mitlenatch Island posts. #1#2#3#4#5#6#7#8)
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