Trapania inbiotica

Trapania inbiotica is a species of sea slug, a dorid nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Goniodorididae.[2]

Trapania inbiotica
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
(unranked):
Superfamily:
Family:
Genus:
Species:
T. inbiotica
Binomial name
Trapania inbiotica
Camacho-Garcia & Ortea, 2000[1]

Distribution

This species was described from Cabo Blanco, Puntarenas, Costa Rica and from Islas Secas, Panamá.[1]

Description

The body of this goniodorid nudibranch is translucent white with red patches composed of small red dots partly coalesced into irregular shaped spots. The rhinophores and gills are white with a few smaller red spots. The oral tentacles, lateral papillae, gills, and tail have red spots at the base and yellow tips.[1][3]

Ecology

Like other species in this genus Trapania inbiotica probably feeds on Entoprocta, which often grow on sponges and other living substrata.

gollark: I also have a very trivial UDP to Discord bridge as a backup alerting system for someone.
gollark: Anyway, for now the DNS to IRC bridge is basically just a moderately funny thing and/or a way to send messages someone might eventually read out of very constrained networks.
gollark: Applications may occasionally be answered.
gollark: https://a.gh0.pw/3
gollark: I mean making good use of the DNS packets, not CPU use on each end; I don't really care about that.

References

  1. Camacho Y. & Ortea J. 2000. A new species of Trapania Pruvot-Fol, 1931 (Nudibranchia: Goniodorididae) from the pacific coast of Central America. Revista de Biología Tropical, 48(2/3): 317-322
  2. Bouchet, P. (2015). Trapania inbiotica. In: MolluscaBase (2015). Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species on 2015-10-19
  3. Hermosillo, A. & Valdés, Á. (2004) Two New Species of Dorid Nudibranchs (Mollusca, Opisthobranchia) from Bahía de Banderas and La Paz, Mexico. Proceedings of the California Academy of Sciences, 55(28): 550–560, 5 figs.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.