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Glaucus atlanticus Nudibranch

This is a blue ocean slug (Glaucus atlanticus) that was washed ashore with a mass, multi-day stranding of thousands of blue bottles (Physalia utriculus). These nudibranchs are part of the rarely seen blue community of the open ocean. They prey on other animals in that community, such as Physalia utriculus, by-the-wind-sailors (Velella velella), blue buttons (Porpita porpita), and violet snails (Janthina janthina). Glaucus nudibranchs are immune to the venom of the blue bottles that they consume. They store their prey’s nematocysts and deploy them in specialized cnidosacs at the tips of their ornate cerata. Because these nudibranchs concentrate the venom of their prey, they can produce a more powerful sting than Physalia.

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glaucus-atlanticus-nudibranch-201711-0974.tif
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Copyright Tony Wu. All rights reserved. No duplication, reproduction or usage without prior written permission.
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6530x5711 / 106.9MB
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Nudibranch Animalia Mollusca Gastropoda Opistrobranchia Nudibranchia Aeolidina Aeolidioidea Glaucidae Glauques atlanticus Blue Angel Blue Dragon Blue Glaucus Blue Ocean Slug Blue Sea Slug Sea Swallow Mollusk Opistobranch Rhinophore Sea Slug Venomous Atlantic Ocean South Africa
Contained in galleries
Marine Life | South Africa, Nudibranchs
This is a blue ocean slug (Glaucus atlanticus) that was washed ashore with a mass, multi-day stranding of thousands of blue bottles (Physalia utriculus). These nudibranchs are part of the rarely seen blue community of the open ocean. They prey on other animals in that community, such as Physalia utriculus, by-the-wind-sailors (Velella velella), blue buttons (Porpita porpita), and violet snails (Janthina janthina). Glaucus nudibranchs are immune to the venom of the blue bottles that they consume. They store their prey’s nematocysts and deploy them in specialized cnidosacs at the tips of their ornate cerata. Because these nudibranchs concentrate the venom of their prey, they can produce a more powerful sting than Physalia.
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