Category: Marine Invertebrates e.g. Sea Slugs


Swimming anemone at Stubbs Island, N. Vancouver Island, BC

Today there was quite a small tidal exchange which allowed us to dive a more challenging site, Stubbs Island.

On larger tides, this island receives so much current that eddies and big upwellings form. All this churning water means there is abundant oxygen and plankton delivery so the density of marine-life on Stubbs Island is truly mind-blowing.  There isn’t a centimetre of rock that does not have something growing on it.

Glen and I would like to share our images from this dive today. We hope they give a sense of the awe-inspiring beauty and biodiversity of our Northern Vancouver Island marine “backyard”.

I’ll let our photos do talking.

Click here for our photos of  -  just one dive at Stubbs Island.

Typical shape of members of the kelp crab family. Species in this family are usually from 5 to 9 cm across the carapace.

This week I bring you the “Where’s Waldo?” of the marine invertebrates. There is a decorator crab in each of the images at the link below. But first, here are some clues for you.

Most of the species of crabs that decorate themselves to be masters of camouflage are in the spider crab family (Majidae family – also known as “kelp crabs”).  The image to the right shows you an undecorated kelp crab with the typical long legs and distinctly shaped shell (“carapace”) of this family.

Some crabs only partially camouflage themselves, especially when they are juveniles. Others ”plant” so many marine neighbours onto themselves that you can’t tell them apart from their environment until they move.

Although they look like walking gardens, the organisms they attach to the stiff, curved hairs on their legs and backs are algae and animals, not plants. The animals can be soft corals, sponges or unique creatures like “bryozoans” and “hydroids”.

Not only does this covering of life allow the crabs to hide from predators, it also changes the way the crabs feel and taste. For example, sponges taste bad or are even toxic to many predators so, if you cover yourself with sponges, predators be gone! The bonus of carrying other organisms on your back is that you also have a food supply within a pincher’s reach.

It is truly astounding how well the decorator crabs match their immediate surroundings which added another mystery to my list: Is the range of decorator crabs really small so that they always match their background OR do they know to “adjust” their camouflage when they move to an area where they no longer blend in?

I have learned that the latter appears to be the case. Experiments with captive decorator crabs have shown that, if moved to a background that no longer offers camouflage, the crabs will “adjust” their decorations!

Click here to find the decorator crabs in my images.

See last week’s posting for Part 1 on the hooded nudibranch (Melibe leonina).

Hooded nudibranchs (up to 10 cm) on giant kelp.

This week, I share video showing this remarkable sea slug when it is swimming. The clip was taken by my partner, above and below the ocean’s surface, Glen Miller.

When viewing the clip, try to identify the animal’s “rhinophores”, the structures coming off the animal’s head that allow it to smell its way around. These structures have the shape of mouse ears but they pick up on chemical signals, not sound.  In last week’s posting I shared how the hooded nudibranchs come together to mate through being attracted by smell (pheromones).

The lobed structures on the animal’s back are the naked (nudi) gills (branchs). They can detach if the hooded nudibranch is threatened and are sticky. Maybe this is so that the predator is distracted by the gills sticking to it allowing the hooded nudibranch to have a greater chance of getting away.

I have included a second clip this week too, taken on today’s dive. No hooded nudibranchs in it, but bull kelp forest visions while my buddy and I were on our “safety stop”; a 3-minute rest at 15 feet to offload nitrogen before surfacing. Thought you might like to take a dip with me!

Click here for video of a hooded nudibranch swimming.

Click here for kelp forest video from today’s dive.


The remarkable looking animal to the right is the hooded nudibranch (Melibe leonina). A nudibranch is a type of sea slug that has naked (“nudi”) gills (“branchs”).

Hooded nudibranch (10 cm long). Note oral hood, sensory tentacles and naked gills (lobed structures on the left)

Since late fall, I have observed hooded nudibranchs gathering at one of my favourite dive sites. They come together in order to mate and it is awe-inspiring to see 100s of them clustered together,delicate and ghost-like, clinging to the thin strands of giant kelp.

Often, you can see them swimming on the surface and many people mistake them for jellyfish. It is indeed one of the most alien looking of the 200+ sea slug species of our area. The large disc-like head lets it feed on plankton and small crustaceans and the lobed structures on the animals’ backs are the naked gills.

Since sea slugs can only sense light and dark, the way hood nudibranchs “call” one another is to send out a fruity scent (pheromones) that attracts others of their kind. My personal experience after having picked up a dead hooded nudibranch on the beach, is that the smell is something like a mix of watermelon and grapefruit and the scent stayed on my hand for more than an hour.

After mating, both animals lay eggs (they are hermaphrodites) and then, they die. You can find additional information about why sea slugs are hermaphrodites at this past posting.

Yesterday, I found ample evidence that mating has been happening. I found many egg masses; images of which I have included at the link below. Each cluster of eggs is only about one centimeter wide and contains thousands of eggs. After about 10 days the eggs will hatch into larvae that will be part of the zooplankton soup of the ocean. The larva are called “veligers” and look very different from the adult hooded nudibranchs. They have a shell and a big flap on their head with which they swim and feed on plant plankton. After 1 to 2 months, they settle to the ocean bottom and change body shape and even digestive tract to become small hooded nudibranches.

Click here for my photos of hooded nudibranchs and their egg masses (includes images from yesterday’s dive).

Next week, the posting will include video of a swimming hooded nudibranch.

Giant nudibranch egg mass at the base of a tube-dwelling anemone.

To follow up on last week’s posting, I now share images of the giant nudibranch swimming and of its egg-laying behaviour.

I know that these are the strangest eggs you will see this Easter!

The story of how the eggs come to be is pretty unique too.

There are no girl or boy sea slugs. They are both male and female; they are hermaphrodites. This means that when sea slugs mate, both animals “get pregnant” and lay eggs.

Sea slugs need this adaptation because it is really difficult for them to find another of their kind.  They are relatively slow moving animals that depend on feel and smell to get around.

They don’t search around aimlessly for a mate though. That would be a waste of energy. The chances of finding a member of their own kind are greater near their favourite food.  To make this clearer, imagine that you were someone who really loved eating pizza and you wanted to find someone else who loved pizza.  The best place to find them would be at  . . . a pizza parlour!

For the giant nudibranch, you know from last week’s posting that they love to eat tube-dwelling anemones so they are likelier to meet a mate around this prey.  They also may give off chemical signals (pheromones) to announce that they are in the area and “looking for love”.

Compared to faster animals that can see though, the chances of sea slugs finding one another are much smaller.  So when they do meet, it is important that they really make it count and have as many babies as possible especially since the eggs will hatch into plankton. This means that many baby sea slugs will become dinner for filter feeders like anemones and barnacles.

How to have as many babies as possible?  Both should lay eggs! This is why they are hermaphrodites; not just a male or female.  The sea slugs line up right side to right side and exchange cells so that they can both lay eggs.

I will share much more about the love life of sea slugs in future postings. Every sea slug species lays eggs that look very different. One of the “cases” I have worked on the longest is to figure out what each species’ eggs look like. A great clue in trying to figure this out is that sea slugs most often lay eggs on their food.

You can imagine my delight when I found a big mass of eggs at the base of a tube-dwelling anemone!  Knowing that the giant nudibranch preys on this species, the chances were very, very good that these were its eggs.

When you follow the link, you can see a larger picture of the eggs mass and get an idea of just how many eggs are in this string (each dot is an egg).

I have also included video of the giant nudibranch swimming for your Easter weekend pleasure.  You’ll see that the nudibranch swims upwards but, when it wants to go down, it just stops moving and gently drifts back down to the ocean bottom. You’ll also see that I am pointing my dive light at the animal and how this makes colours look different underwater.

Click here for the giant nudibranchs eggs and swimming behaviour.

This week’s “case” features the giant nudibranch (Dendronotus iris) and the tube-dwelling anemone (Pachycerianthus fimbriatus).

Giant nudibranch looking for dinner, the tube-dwelling anemone

Nudibranchs are sea slugs with naked (“nudi”) gills (“branch”) and this species is indeed “giant” at up to 30 cm (12 inches). Like all sea slugs, they have a very poor sense of sight and find their way around largely by touch and detecting chemicals.

The giant nudibranch’s favourite snack is the tube-dwelling anemone. Anemones’ stinging cells (nematocysts) serve as a good defence to most predators but not to the giant nudibranch. Nudibranchs that feed on animals with stinging cells actually incorporate the stinging cells and use them as their own defence!  They “steal” the anemone’s weapons.

This anemone species is therefore adapted to also withdraw into a tube to get away from the predator sea slug.

And the battle is on! The giant nudibranch patrols the sandy ocean plains “looking” for the tube-dwelling anemone. When it finds one, it rears up and pounces, mouth parts extended in the hopes of grabbing onto the anemone. When the anemone senses the nudibranch’s attack, it withdraws into its tube.

Wait till you see what happens to the giant nudibranch!

At the link below, I provide you with the video of such an attack. I have also included a collection of photos to show you colour variation in this nudibranch species and photo stills of the attack behaviour.

I did not catch the conclusion of the attack in the video but read the video’s caption to find out what happens. Be sure you know “Who eats who”!

Via “The Marine Detective” there will be many more postings about this and many other Northeast Pacific sea slug species.

Click here for video and photos.

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