THIS MONTH'S WINNERS:
Congratulations:
One
Winner in September!
Leslie Bean
Instructor
Gupton Jones College
Atlanta, Georgia
Please
note: Prize winners are now drawn each month from the total pool of
correct answers for that month.
Thanks
to all of those who submitted an entry to this contest.
Good luck
this month!
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A Rose By Any Other Name! Hopkin's Rose nudibranch - Hopkinsia rosacaea
Many people identified our September unknown as a sea anemone. A very reasonable guess, since this lovely pink nudibranch may be a mimic for a sea anemone frequently found in the same habitat - the brooding anemone, Epiactus proliferi. Hopkins rose is a lovely species belonging to the dorid group of nudibranchs. The tentacle like structures on its dorsal surface are unusual for a dorid nudibranch. Other dorid nudibranchs, such as the sea lemon (Archidoris montereyensis) have a domed body without elongated surface structures. All dorids however, have a set of two elongated receptor organs at the head (anterior) end -- the rhinophores. In this photo, they are located on the right, and are slightly darker than the light pink tubercles covering the body.
A second feature of dorid nudibranchs is the set of gills at the
posterior end of the body. Hopkins rose nudibranch ranges from Oregon
to Baja California, and is especially common around Monterey, California.
It feeds on another pink animal, the bryozoan, Eurystomella bilabiata,
a lovely rose-colored bryozoan found under rocks in the low tide
zone and below, from Southern California to Alaska. |