Sakuraeolis nungunoides

Rudman, 1980

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Sakuraeolis nungunoides from Miri, Malaysia
Identification verified by Bill Rudman
 
Below is comment from Dr. Bill Rudman, go to Sea Slug Forum to read more information
Dear Mike,

I hope you left yourself some room to retreat with dignity because this time your girlfriend was right. It is Sakuraeolis nungunoides. The difference between the two is mainly that in the lower photo the cerata are being held stiff and upright. Many glaucid aeolids erect their cerata like this when disturbed. Sakuraeolis nungunoides not only straightens its cerata but it also bristles them, quivering and pointing the red colored tips, containing their cnidosacs, at the source of the irritation.  Porcupines bristle their spines in much the same way when attacked. When I first found this species in East Africa I named it 'nungunoides' after the Swahili word for the porcupine -nungunungu.

It has since been found in many parts of the tropical Indo-West Pacific..

Best wishes,

Bill Rudman
Location:Miri, Malaysia
Photographer:Mike Krampf
Camera:Olympus μ600View EXIF properties
Taken on:May 27, 2006
Viewed:430 times
Posted:1 year ago
Updated:7 months ago

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Scientific Classification

Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Mollusca
Class:Gastropoda
Subclass:Opisthobranchia
Order:Nudibranchia
Suborder:Aeolidina
Family:Facelinidae
Species:Sakuraeolis nungunoides