Phyllodesmium longicirrum
(Bergh, 1905)
» If you find this species has been misidentified, please let us know


Below is comment from Dr. Bill Rudman, go to Sea Slug Forum to read more information
Dear Mike,
I guess you have looked at the solar powered sea slug page, and the related topics listed there. Phyllodesmium longicirrum is one of the most spectacular of the solar-powered slugs because of its large flattened cerata, which remind me of the large solar paddles on earth-orbiting satellites. In this species the brown rings you can see on the skin of the body, the rhinophores and the cerata, are gardens of single-celled plants [zooxanthellae] which the animal obtains from the soft coral Sarcophyton, on which it is feeding in your photos. The pale whitish branching in the cerata are the ducts of the gut which take the zooxanthellae from the stomach out to these gardens. I am not sure why a few of the cerata are colourless but its seems they lack both the ducts of the gut and the zooxanthellae. P. longicirrum, like all species ofPhyllodesmium, is able to cast off its cerata [autotomy], much like some lizards drop off their tail, as a defensive strategy. They are able to regrow these cerata quite quickly. Perhaps these are some replacement cerata which for some reason were unable to regrow the branches of the gut?
Best wishes,
Bill Rudman
| Location: | Manado, Indonesia |
| Photographer: | Michael Henke |
| Camera: | Canon Digital IXUS 700 › View EXIF properties |
| Taken on: | November 2, 2006 |
| Viewed: | 267 times |
| Posted: | 8 months ago |
| Updated: | 7 months ago |
« Philinopsis sp. | Other nudibranch photos (page 435) | Philinopsis cyanea »
Other photos of Phyllodesmium longicirrum
Scientific Classification
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Mollusca |
| Class: | Gastropoda |
| Subclass: | Opisthobranchia |
| Order: | Nudibranchia |
| Suborder: | Aeolidina |
| Family: | Facelinidae |
| Species: | Phyllodesmium longicirrum |