Chromodoris annae

Bergh, 1877

Chromodoris annae
Photographed by: Daniela Gut

Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Mollusca
Class:Gastropoda
Subclass:Opisthobranchia
Order:Nudibranchia
Suborder:Doridina
Family:Chromodorididae
Species:Chromodoris annae

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #7060
Note the abnormal left rhinophore in this individual.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #6444
A juvenile individual.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #6331
A very small juvenile individual.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #5642
A juvenile individual.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #4965
Chromodoris annae (left) and Chromodoris cf. strigata (right).

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #955
It is definitely not Chromodoris elisabethina because it has a white marginal band, which makes it either Chromodoris annae or Chromodoris magnifica. I choose Chromodoris annae because of the black peppered pattern on the blue areas of the mantle.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #32
A colour form with a white marginal band, but the black speckles on the mantle are distinctive.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #44
A colour form with a white marginal band, but the black speckles on the mantle are distinctive.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #2439
Yes; this tropical species (plus the temperate Western Australian endemic species Chromodoris westraliensis) has the black pores all over the mantle which gives immediate identification.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #1911
Note the numerous black speckles like pepper on the blue central area of the mantle.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #1157
Note the numerous black speckles like pepper on the blue central area of the mantle.

Comment from Richard Willan on photo #768
An atypical specimen that has wider than normal white bands either side of the orange band. However the conspicuous glandular pores that look like sprinkled pepper on the central (pale blue) section of the mantle that characterise this species are perfectly discernible.

Locality:

 

Pictures of Chromodoris annae

Chromodoris annae from Manado, Indonesia
Posted 4 months ago
Viewed 206 times
Chromodoris annae from Bali, Indonesia
Location: Bali, Indonesia
Posted 4 months ago
Viewed 196 times
Chromodoris annae from Bali, Indonesia
Location: Bali, Indonesia
Posted 4 months ago
Viewed 192 times
Chromodoris annae from Bali, Indonesia
Location: Bali, Indonesia
Posted 4 months ago
Viewed 201 times
Chromodoris annae from Lembeh, Indonesia
Posted 3 months ago
Viewed 255 times
Chromodoris annae from Wakatobi, Indonesia
Posted 3 months ago
Viewed 197 times
Chromodoris annae from Bali, Indonesia
Location: Bali, Indonesia
Posted 3 months ago
Viewed 183 times
Chromodoris annae from Bali, Indonesia
Location: Bali, Indonesia
Posted 3 months ago
Viewed 167 times
Chromodoris annae from Bali, Indonesia
Location: Bali, Indonesia
Posted 3 months ago
Viewed 160 times
Chromodoris annae from Lankayan, MalaysiaIdentification reviewed by Richard Willan
Posted 3 months ago
Viewed 334 times
Chromodoris annae from Flores, Indonesia
Posted 3 months ago
Viewed 190 times
Chromodoris annae from Anilao, PhilippinesIdentification reviewed by Richard Willan
Posted 2 months ago
Viewed 178 times
 
 

Similar Species

Author: Nila Murti

Both have elongated bodyform, both have yellowish or orange-ish gills and rhinophones, both have similar mantle colouration and colour variation - pale to bright blue in the middle with black elongated lines bordering the blue area, and faded to bright orange mantle margin.

Chromodoris elisabethina normally has more elongated black lines in the blue area, sometimes a median line, often some broken shorter lines.

Chromodoris annae usually has no or less black lines, but some have been found to have multi black lines like Chromodoris elisabethina.

So what's the telltale difference? Apparently it's the uniformity of the blue colour. If it's smooth and uniformly coloured then it's Chromodoris elisabethina, while if the blue area has tiny dark speckles hence not uniform (zoom your photos to see it!) then it's Chromodoris annae.

 
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