Glaucus marginatus

Glaucus marginatus is a species of small, floating, blue sea slug; a pelagic aeolid nudibranch; a marine opisthobranch gastropod mollusc in the family Glaucidae.[1][2] This species is closely related to Glaucus atlanticus, and is part of a species complex (Informal clade Marginatus) along with Glaucus bennettae, Glaucus thompsoni, and Glaucus mcfarlanei.[3]

Glaucus marginatus
Scientific classification
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(unranked):
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G. marginatus
Binomial name
Glaucus marginatus
(Reinhardt & Bergh, 1864)
Synonyms[1]
  • Glaucilla briarea (Reinhardt & Bergh, 1864)
  • Glaucilla marginata (Reinhardt & Bergh, 1864) (original combination)

Distribution

This species is pelagic, and can be found in the Pacific Ocean.

Habitat

These small nudibranchs float upside down on the surface tension in temperate and tropical seas. They eat colonial cnidarians such as the Portuguese man o' war.[2]

gollark: If you want long timescales or detailed predictions then weather prediction is really hard, but the simple rule of "low pressure means problems" is fairly accurate because something something air from other places moves in.
gollark: No dubious "chaos theory" involved.
gollark: This sounds basically right.
gollark: It's not a butterfly effect thing?
gollark: It's not impossible that their joints could react to air pressure somehow. And you can do very coarse weather prediction off air pressure trends.

References

  1. "Glaucus". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 5 August 2012.
  2. Valdés A. & Campillo O.A. (2004) Systematics of pelagic aeolid nudibranchs of the family Glaucidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda). Bulletin of Marine Science 75(3): 381–389.
  3. Churchill C.K.C, Valdés A. & Ó Foighil D. (2014) Molecular and morphological systematics of neustonic nudibranchs (Mollusca : Gastropoda : Glaucidae : Glaucus), with descriptions of three new cryptic species. Invertebrate Systematics 28(2): 174-195.

Description

This nudibranch is dark blue, and in many ways it resembles a smaller version of Glaucus atlanticus. However, in this species the cerata are arranged in a single row in each arch.

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