Nudibranch
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Nudibranchs () are a group of soft-bodied marine
gastropod Gastropods (), commonly known as slugs and snails, belong to a large Taxonomy (biology), taxonomic class of invertebrates within the phylum Mollusca called Gastropoda (). This class comprises snails and slugs from saltwater, freshwater, and fro ...
mollusc Mollusca is a phylum of protostome, protostomic invertebrate animals, whose members are known as molluscs or mollusks (). Around 76,000 extant taxon, extant species of molluscs are recognized, making it the second-largest animal phylum ...
s, belonging to the order Nudibranchia, that shed their shells after their larval stage. They are noted for their often extraordinary colours and striking forms, and they have been given colourful nicknames to match, such as "clown", "marigold", "splendid", "dancer", "dragon", and "sea rabbit". About 3,000 species of nudibranchs are known.Ocean Portal (2017)
A Collage of Nudibranch Colors
Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History. Retrieved 17 April 2018.
The word ''nudibranch'' comes from the
Latin Latin ( or ) is a classical language belonging to the Italic languages, Italic branch of the Indo-European languages. Latin was originally spoken by the Latins (Italic tribe), Latins in Latium (now known as Lazio), the lower Tiber area aroun ...
'naked' and the
Ancient Greek Ancient Greek (, ; ) includes the forms of the Greek language used in ancient Greece and the classical antiquity, ancient world from around 1500 BC to 300 BC. It is often roughly divided into the following periods: Mycenaean Greek (), Greek ...
() ' gills'. Nudibranchs are often casually called
sea slug Sea slug is a common name for some Marine biology, marine invertebrates with varying levels of resemblance to terrestrial Slug, slugs. Most creatures known as sea slugs are gastropods, i.e. they are Sea snail, sea snails (marine gastropod moll ...
s, as they are a family of opisthobranchs (sea slugs), within the phylum Mollusca (molluscs), but many sea slugs belong to several taxonomic groups that are not closely related to nudibranchs. A number of these other sea slugs, such as the
photosynthetic Photosynthesis ( ) is a Biological system, system of biological processes by which Photoautotrophism, photosynthetic organisms, such as most plants, algae, and cyanobacteria, convert light energy, typically from sunlight, into the chemical ener ...
'' Sacoglossa'' and the colourful Aglajidae, are often confused with nudibranchs.


Distribution and habitat

Nudibranchs occur in seas worldwide, ranging from the Arctic, through temperate and tropical regions, to the Southern Ocean around Antarctica.Nudibranchs
, Fishermen Scuba.
However, they are mostly found around
Southeast Asia Southeast Asia is the geographical United Nations geoscheme for Asia#South-eastern Asia, southeastern region of Asia, consisting of the regions that are situated south of China, east of the Indian subcontinent, and northwest of the Mainland Au ...
. They are almost entirely restricted to salt water, although a few species are known to inhabit lower salinities in brackish water. Nudibranchs live at virtually all depths, from the intertidal zone to depths well over . The greatest diversity of nudibranchs is seen in warm, shallow reefs, although one nudibranch species was discovered at a depth near . This nudibranch, described in 2024 as '' Bathydevius'', is the only known nudibranch with a bathypelagic lifestyle and is one of the very few to be bioluminescent. Nudibranchs are benthic animals, found crawling over the substrate. The only exceptions to this are the neustonic '' Glaucus'' nudibranchs, which float upside down just under the ocean's surface, such as the glaucus atlanticus; the pelagic nudibranchs '' Cephalopyge trematoides'', which swim in the water column; the two pelagic species of '' Phylliroe'', and the evolutionarily distinct, bathypelagic '' Bathydevius.''


Anatomical description

The body forms of nudibranchs vary greatly. Because they are opisthobranchs, unlike most other gastropods, they are apparently bilaterally symmetrical externally (but not internally) because they have undergone secondary detorsion. In all nudibranchs, the male and female sexual openings are on the right side of the body, reflecting their asymmetrical origins. They lack a mantle cavity. Some species have venomous appendages (
cerata :''The tortrix moth genus ''Cerata'' is considered a junior synonym of ''Cydia (genus), Cydia. Cerata, singular ceras, are anatomical structures found externally in nudibranch sea slugs, especially in aeolid nudibranchs, marine animal, marine opi ...
) on their sides, which deter predators. Many also have a simple gut and a mouth with a radula. The eyes in nudibranchs are simple and able to discern little more than light and dark. The eyes are set into the body, are about a quarter of a millimeter in diameter, and consist of a lens and five photoreceptors. Nudibranchs vary in adult size from . The adult form is without a shell or operculum (in shelled gastropods, the operculum is a bony or horny plate that can cover the opening of the shell when the body is withdrawn). In most species, there is a swimming veliger larva with a coiled shell, but the shell is shed at metamorphosis when the larva transforms into the adult form. Some species have direct development, and the shell is shed before the animal emerges from the egg mass.Thompson, T. E. (1976). ''Biology of opisthobranch molluscs'', 1, 207 pp., 21 pls. Ray Society, no. 151. The name ''nudibranch'' is appropriate, since the dorids (infraclass Anthobranchia) breathe through a "naked gill" shaped into branchial plumes in a rosette on their backs. By contrast, on the back of the aeolids in the clade Cladobranchia, brightly coloured sets of protruding organs called
cerata :''The tortrix moth genus ''Cerata'' is considered a junior synonym of ''Cydia (genus), Cydia. Cerata, singular ceras, are anatomical structures found externally in nudibranch sea slugs, especially in aeolid nudibranchs, marine animal, marine opi ...
are present. Nudibranchs have cephalic (head) tentacles, which are sensitive to touch, taste, and smell. Club-shaped rhinophores detect odors.


Defence mechanisms

In the course of their evolution, nudibranchs have lost their shells, while developing alternative defence mechanisms. Some species evolved an external anatomy with textures and colours that mimicked surrounding sessile invertebrate animals (often their prey sponges or soft corals) to avoid predators with camouflage. Other nudibranchs, as seen especially well on ''Chromodoris'' ''quadricolor'', have an intensely bright and contrasting colour pattern that makes them especially conspicuous in their surroundings. Nudibranch molluscs are the most commonly cited examples of aposematism in marine ecosystems, but the evidence for this has been contested, mostly because few examples of
mimicry In evolutionary biology, mimicry is an evolved resemblance between an organism and another object, often an organism of another species. Mimicry may evolve between different species, or between individuals of the same species. In the simples ...
are seen among species, many species are nocturnal or cryptic, and bright colours at the red end of the spectrum are rapidly attenuated as a function of water depth. For example, the Spanish dancer nudibranch (genus '' Hexabranchus''), among the largest of tropical marine slugs, potently chemically defended, and brilliantly red and white, is nocturnal and has no known mimics. Other studies of nudibranch molluscs have concluded they are aposematically coloured, for example, the slugs of the family Phylidiidae from Indo-Pacific coral reefs. Nudibranchs that feed on hydrozoids can store the hydrozoids' nematocysts (stinging cells) in the dorsal body wall, the
cerata :''The tortrix moth genus ''Cerata'' is considered a junior synonym of ''Cydia (genus), Cydia. Cerata, singular ceras, are anatomical structures found externally in nudibranch sea slugs, especially in aeolid nudibranchs, marine animal, marine opi ...
. These stolen nematocysts, called kleptocnidae, wander through the alimentary tract without harming the nudibranch. Once further into the organ, the cells are assimilated by intestinal protuberances and brought to specific placements on the creature's hind body. The specific mechanism by which nudibranchs protect themselves from the hydrozoids and their nematocysts is yet unknown, but special cells with large
vacuole A vacuole () is a membrane-bound organelle which is present in Plant cell, plant and Fungus, fungal Cell (biology), cells and some protist, animal, and bacterial cells. Vacuoles are essentially enclosed compartments which are filled with water ...
s probably play an important role. Similarly, some nudibranchs can also take in plant cells (symbiotic algae from soft corals) and reuse these to make food for themselves. The related group of sacoglossan sea slugs feed on algae and retain just the chloroplasts for their own photosynthetic use, a process known as kleptoplasty. Some of these species have been observed practising autotomy, severing portions of their body to remove parasites, and have been observed to regrow their whole body from their head if decapitated. Nudibranchs use a variety of chemical defences to aid in protection,, a comprehensive review of the chemical ecology of the nudibranchs but the strategy need not be lethal to be effective; in fact, good arguments exist that chemical defences should evolve to be distasteful rather than toxic. Some sponge-eating nudibranchs concentrate the chemical defences from their prey sponge in their bodies, rendering themselves distasteful to predators. One method of chemical defense used by nudibranchs are secondary metabolites, which play an important role in mediating relationships among marine communities. The evidence that suggests the chemical compounds used by dorid nudibranchs do in fact come from dietary sponges lies in the similarities between the metabolites of prey and nudibranchs, respectively. Furthermore, nudibranchs contain a mixture of sponge chemicals when they are in the presence of multiple food sources, as well as change defence chemicals with a concurrent change in diet. This, however, is not the only way for nudibranchs to develop chemical defences. Certain Antarctic marine species defense mechanisms are believed to be controlled by biological factors like predation, competition, and selective pressures. Certain species can produce their own chemicals ''de novo'' without dietary influence. Evidence for the different chemical production methods comes with the characteristic uniformity of chemical composition across drastically different environments and geographic locations found throughout ''de novo'' production species compared to the wide variety of dietary and environmentally dependent chemical composition in sequestering species. Another protection method is releasing the ugdon acid from the skin. Once the specimen is physically irritated or touched by another creature, it will release the mucus automatically, eating the animal from the inside out.


Apparent production of sound

In 1884, Philip Henry Gosse reported observations by "Professor Grant" (possibly Robert Edmond Grant) that two species of nudibranchs emit sounds that are audible to humans.
Two very elegant species of Sea-slug, viz., ''Eolis punctata'' .e. ''Facelina annulicornis''">Facelina_annulicornis.html" ;"title=".e. ''Facelina annulicornis">.e. ''Facelina annulicornis'' and ''Tritonia arborescens'' [i.e. ''Dendronotus frondosus''], certainly produce audible sounds. Professor Grant, who first observed the interesting fact in some specimens of the latter, which he was keeping in an aquarium, says of the sounds that 'they resemble very much the clink of a steel wire on the side of the jar, one stroke only been given at a time, and repeated at intervals of a minute or two; when placed in a large basin of water, the sound is much obscured and is like that of a watch, one stroke being repeated, as before, at intervals. The sound is longest and most often repeated when the ''Tritonia'' are lively and moving about and is not heard when they are cold and without any motion; in the dark, I have not observed any light emitted at the time of the stroke; no globule of air escapes to the surface of the water, nor is any ripple produced on the surface at the instant of the stroke; the sound, when in a glass vessel, is mellow and distinct.' The Professor has kept these ''Tritonia'' alive in his room for a month. During the whole period of their confinement, they have continued to produce the sounds with very little diminution of their original intensity. In a small apartment, they are audible at a distance of twelve feet. The sounds obviously proceed from the mouth of the animal, and at the instant of the stroke, we observe the lips suddenly separate as if to allow the water to rush into a small vacuum formed within. As these animals are hermaphrodites, requiring mutual impregnation, the sounds may possibly be a means of communication between them, or, if they are of an electric nature, they may be the means of defending from foreign enemies, one of the most delicate, defenceless, and beautiful Gasteropods that inhabit the deep.


Life cycle

Nudibranchs are hermaphroditic, thus having a set of reproductive organs for both sexes, but they cannot fertilize themselves. Mating usually takes a few minutes and involves a dance-like courtship. Nudibranchs typically deposit their eggs within a gelatinous spiral, which is often described as looking like a ribbon. The number of eggs varies; it can be as few as just 1 or 2 eggs ('' Vayssierea felis'') or as many as an estimated 25 million ('' Aplysia fasciata''). The eggs contain toxins from sea sponges as a means of deterring predators. After hatching, the infants look almost identical to their adult counterparts, albeit smaller. Infants may also have fewer
cerata :''The tortrix moth genus ''Cerata'' is considered a junior synonym of ''Cydia (genus), Cydia. Cerata, singular ceras, are anatomical structures found externally in nudibranch sea slugs, especially in aeolid nudibranchs, marine animal, marine opi ...
. The lifespan of nudibranchs can range from a few weeks to a year, depending on the species.


Feeding and ecological role

All known nudibranchs are carnivorous. Some feed on sponges, others on hydroids (e.g. '' Cuthona''), others on
bryozoa Bryozoa (also known as the Polyzoa, Ectoprocta or commonly as moss animals) are a phylum of simple, aquatic animal, aquatic invertebrate animals, nearly all living in sedentary Colony (biology), colonies. Typically about long, they have a spe ...
ns ( phanerobranchs such as '' Tambja'', ''Limacia, Plocamopherus'' and ''Triopha''), and some eat other sea slugs or their eggs (e.g. '' Favorinus'') or, on some occasions, are cannibals and prey on members of their own species. Other groups feed on tunicates (e.g. '' Nembrotha'', '' Goniodoris''), other nudibranchs ('' Roboastra'', which are descended from tunicate-feeding species), barnacles (e.g. ''Onchidoris bilamellata''), and anemones (e.g. the Aeolidiidae and other Cladobranchia). The surface-dwelling nudibranch, '' Glaucus atlanticus'', is a specialist predator of siphonophores, such as the Portuguese man o' war. This predatory mollusc sucks air into its stomach to keep it afloat, and using its muscular foot, it clings to the surface film. If it finds a small victim, ''Glaucus'' simply envelops it with its capacious mouth, but if the prey is a larger siphonophore, the mollusc nibbles off its fishing tentacles, the ones carrying the most potent nematocysts. Like some others of its kind, ''Glaucus'' does not digest the nematocysts; instead, it uses them to defend itself by passing them from its gut to the surface of its skin. Many of these larvae have not been put forth as only 36 species has been studied and only 23 in the lab. The ecology of nudibranchs' change with species.


Taxonomy

Nudibranchs are commonly divided into two main kinds, dorid and aeolid (also spelled eolid) nudibranchs:Hans Bertsch
Nudibranchs: Marine slugs with verve
"Navanax inermis .is the bane of all nudibranchs because it is one of the few known predators of this group of slugs. ..Dorids mainly eat sponges, bryozoans, and tunicates, whereas aeolids principally eat cnidarians."
* Dorids (clade Anthobranchia, Doridacea, or Doridoidea) are recognised by having an intact digestive gland and the feather-like branchial (gill) plume, which forms a cluster on the posterior part of the body, around the anus. Fringes on the mantle do not contain any intestines. Additionally, dorid nudibranchs commonly have distinct pockets, bumps, and/or mantle dermal formations, which are distortions on their skin, used to store bioactive defense chemicals. * Aeolids (clade Cladobranchia) have
cerata :''The tortrix moth genus ''Cerata'' is considered a junior synonym of ''Cydia (genus), Cydia. Cerata, singular ceras, are anatomical structures found externally in nudibranch sea slugs, especially in aeolid nudibranchs, marine animal, marine opi ...
(spread across the back) instead of the branchial plume. The cerata function in place of gills and facilitate gas exchange through the epidermis. Additionally, aeolids possess a branched digestive gland, which may extend into the cerate and often has tips that contain cnidosacs (stinging cells absorbed from prey species and then used by the nudibranch). They lack a mantle. Some are hosts to zooxanthellae. The exact systematics of nudibranchs are a topic of recent revision. Traditionally, nudibranchs have been treated as the order Nudibranchia, located in the gastropod mollusc subclass Opisthobranchia (the marine slugs: which consisted of nudibranchs, sidegill slugs, bubble snails, algae sap-sucking sea slugs, and sea hares). Since 2005, pleurobranchs (which had previously been grouped among sidegill slugs) have been placed alongside nudibranchs in the clade Nudipleura (recognising them as more closely related to each other than to other opisthobranchs). Since 2010, Opisthobranchia has been recognised as not a valid clade (it is
paraphyletic Paraphyly is a taxonomic term describing a grouping that consists of the grouping's last common ancestor and some but not all of its descendant lineages. The grouping is said to be paraphyletic ''with respect to'' the excluded subgroups. In co ...
) and instead Nudipleura has been placed as the first offshoot of Euthyneura (which is the dominant clade of gastropods). In 2024, a brand new family of deep-sea pelagic nudibranch, Bathydeviidae, was described as containing a single genus, '' Bathydevius''. This family does not appear to be closely related to any other extant nudibranch and is the only known bathypelagic nudibranch taxon.


Traditional hierarchy

This classification was based on the work of Johannes Thiele (1931), built on the concepts of Henri Milne-Edwards (1848). Order Nudibranchia: * Infraorder Anthobranchia Férussac, 1819 (dorids) ** Superfamily Doridoidea Rafinesque, 1815 ** Superfamily Doridoxoidea Bergh, 1900 ** Superfamily Onchidoridoidea Alder & Hancock, 1845 ** Superfamily Polyceroidea Alder & Hancock, 1845 * Infraorder Cladobranchia Willan & Morton, 1984 (aeolids) ** Superfamily Aeolidioidea J. E. Gray, 1827 ** Superfamily Arminoidea Rafinesque, 1814 ** Superfamily Dendronotoidea Allman, 1845 ** Superfamily Metarminoidea Odhner in Franc, 1968


Early revisions

Newer insights derived from morphological data and gene-sequence research seemed to confirm those ideas. On the basis of investigation of 18S rDNA sequence data, strong evidence supports the monophyly of the Nudibranchia and its two major groups, the Anthobranchia/Doridoidea and Cladobranchia. A study published in May 2001, again revised the taxonomy of the Nudibranchia. They were thus divided into two major clades: * Anthobranchia (= Bathydoridoidea + Doridoidea) * Dexiarchia nom. nov. (= Doridoxoidea + Dendronotoidea + Aeolidoidea + "Arminoidea"). However, according to the taxonomy by Bouchet & Rocroi (2005), currently the most up-to-date system of classifying the gastropods, the Nudibranchia are a subclade within the
clade In biology, a clade (), also known as a Monophyly, monophyletic group or natural group, is a group of organisms that is composed of a common ancestor and all of its descendants. Clades are the fundamental unit of cladistics, a modern approach t ...
of the Nudipleura. The Nudibranchia are then divided into two clades, with a third described in 2024: * Bathydeviidae * Euctenidiacea (= Holohepatica) ** Gnathodoridacea (contains only Bathydorididae) ** Doridacea *** Doridoidea *** Phyllidioidea *** Onchidoridoidea *** Polyceroidea (= Phanerobranchiata Non Suctoria) * Dexiarchia (= Actenidiacea) ** Pseudoeuctenidiacea ( = Doridoxida) ** Cladobranchia ( = Cladohepatica) *** Euarminida ***
Dendronotida Dendronotoidea is a taxonomic superfamily of small colorful sea slugs or nudibranchs, aeolid nudibranchs.MolluscaBase eds. (2022). MolluscaBase. Dendronotoidea Allman, 1845. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: http://www.m ...
*** Aeolidida *** Unassigned Cladobranchia (previously Metarminoidea) **** Charcotiidae **** Dironidae ****
Goniaeolididae ''Goniaeolis'' is a Monotypic taxon, monotypic genus of sea slug, a nudibranch, a marine (ocean), marine gastropod mollusc in the family (biology), family Goniaeolididae containing the single species ''Goniaeolis typica''.Gofas, S. (2014).''Gonia ...
**** Heroidae **** Proctonotidae **** Madrellidae **** Pinufiidae **** Embletoniidae


Gallery

This gallery shows some of the great variability in the color and form of nudibranchs, and nudibranch egg ribbons. File:Tritoniopsis elegans.jpg, '' Tritoniopsis elegans'' File:Nembrotha cristata bunaken.jpg, '' Nembrotha cristata'' in Bunaken National Park File:Nudibranch in tidepool.jpg, Sea clown ('' Triopha catalinae''), Northern
California California () is a U.S. state, state in the Western United States that lies on the West Coast of the United States, Pacific Coast. It borders Oregon to the north, Nevada and Arizona to the east, and shares Mexico–United States border, an ...
File:Chromodoris annae.JPG, '' Chromodoris annae'' from Lembeh Straits,
Indonesia Indonesia, officially the Republic of Indonesia, is a country in Southeast Asia and Oceania, between the Indian Ocean, Indian and Pacific Ocean, Pacific oceans. Comprising over List of islands of Indonesia, 17,000 islands, including Sumatra, ...
File:Bailarina Española por Gustavo Gerdel.jpg, Spanish dancer ( Hexabranchus sanguineus), taken at night,
Red Sea The Red Sea is a sea inlet of the Indian Ocean, lying between Africa and Asia. Its connection to the ocean is in the south, through the Bab-el-Mandeb Strait and the Gulf of Aden. To its north lie the Sinai Peninsula, the Gulf of Aqaba, and th ...
File:Nembrotha chamberlaini (AA1).jpg, '' Nembrotha chamberlaini'' from Verde Island, the Philippines File:Glossodoris atromarginata.jpg, '' Glossodoris atromarginata'' File:Chromodoris dianae (AA2).jpg, '' Chromodoris dianae'' from Verde Island, the Philippines File:Nembrotha milleri mating.jpg, A pair of '' Nembrotha milleri'' mating at Verde Island, the Philippines File:Regal Sea Goddess Nudibranch.jpg, Regal sea goddess ('' Felimare picta'') in the Gray's Reef National Marine Sanctuary, Savannah, Georgia File:Flabellina Affinis - La Herradura.jpg, '' Flabellina affinis'' at La Herradura (Mediterranean Sea), Spain File:Eggs of nudibranch.JPG, Dorid nudibranch egg ribbon in Moss Beach, California File:Nudibranch egg ribbon at Shaab Mahmoud.JPG, Nudibranch egg ribbon at Shaab Mahmoud (Red Sea), Egypt File:Nudibranch egg ribbon at Malahi.JPG, Nudibranch egg ribbon at Malahi (Red Sea), Egypt File:Goniobranchus Kuniei.jpg, '' Goniobranchus kuniei'', off the coast of
Papua New Guinea Papua New Guinea, officially the Independent State of Papua New Guinea, is an island country in Oceania that comprises the eastern half of the island of New Guinea and offshore islands in Melanesia, a region of the southwestern Pacific Ocean n ...
File:Nudi branch.jpg, Nudibranch File:Mushroom coral reticulidia with an orange stowaway, pantai kollo soha, wakatobi, 2018 (45088582314).jpg, Mushroom coral reticulidia ('' Reticulidia fungia'', at Wakatobi National Park, Indonesia, 2018


See also

* Symposia and workshops on opisthobranchs


References


Further reading

* Thompson, T. E. (1976). ''Biology of opisthobranch molluscs'' Vol. 1. 207 pp., 21 pls. Ray Society, no. 151. * Thompson, T. E., & Brown, G. H. (1984). ''Biology of opisthobranch molluscs'' Vol. 2. 229 pp., 41 pls. Ray Society, no. 156. * McDonald, Gary R. (7 July 2021)
Institute of Marine Sciences. Bibliographia Nudibranchia, 3rd online Edition.
A listing, by Author, of publications on nudibranchs. * McDonald, Gary R. (7 July 2021)
Institute of Marine Sciences. Nudibranch Systematic Index, 3rd online Edition.
An index of names given to nudibranchs and their subsequent use, referenced to Bibliographia Nudibranchia. * McDonald, Gary R. & Nybakken, J. W. (November 5, 2014)
List of the Worldwide Food Habits of Nudibranchs
* Coleman, Neville (2008). ''Nudibranchs Encyclopedia: Catalogue of Asia/Indo-Pacific Sea Slugs''. Neville Coleman's Underwater Geographic.


External links


Sea Slug Forum
by William B. Rudman
Nudibranchs of the British Isles

OPK Opistobranquis – Iberian and Mediterranean Opisthobranchs


* ttp://slugsite.tierranet.com The Slug Site, Michael D. Miller 2002–2014
Images, information and identification of Nudibranchs

Nudibranch Photos by Mick Tait

Nudibranchs in their natural environment, Scuba Diving – Narooma NSW offline? 26 Nov 2014

Nudi Pixel: Online resource for nudibranchs and sea slugs identification using photographs


* ttps://web.archive.org/web/20100107002612/http://www.sergeyphoto.com/underwater/nudibranchs.html Nudibranch gallery – Sergey Parinov – offline? 26 Nov 2014
Opisthobranch Newsletter – Bibliography and portal to opisthobranch, nudibranch & sea-slug information

Scottish Nudibranchs: Online resource for identification of species found in Scottish waters

National Geographic Nudibranch Photo Gallery

Sea Slugs of Hawaii

Slug City – ''Molluscs. Brain & Behavior''
from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign


Videos


Attack of the Sea Slugs
at YouTube
The Lynx Nudibranch
HD clip of ''Phidiana lynceus'' carefully consuming a hydroid ''Myrionema amboinense''.

many videos of nudibranchs from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign {{Authority control Nudipleura Taxa named by Georges Cuvier