Chromodoris lochi

Photographed by: Ole Johan Brett
| Kingdom: | Animalia |
| Phylum: | Mollusca |
| Class: | Gastropoda |
| Subclass: | Opisthobranchia |
| Order: | Nudibranchia |
| Suborder: | Doridina |
| Family: | Chromodorididae |
| Species: | Chromodoris lochi |
Locality:
- Indonesia
- Manado (8) Jan, Apr, Jul, Oct, Nov, Dec
- Lembeh (8) Jan, Mar, Jul, Oct
- Bunaken (7) Mar, Jul, Sep
- North Sulawesi (4) Mar, Apr
- Ambon (3) Jan, Oct
- Raja Ampat (1) Mar
- Wakatobi (1) Jun
- Bali (1) Oct
- Siladen (1) Jun
- Solomon Islands
- Solomon Islands (3) Aug
- PNG
- Australia
- Queensland (1) May
- Nthn. Mariana Islands
- Saipan (1) Jul
- Vanuatu
- Vanuatu (1)
- Fiji
- Fiji (1) Feb
- Taiwan
- Green Island (1)
- French Polynesia
- Taha'a (1) Mar
Pictures of Chromodoris lochi
Similar Species
Author: Nila Murti
With their strikingly similar colours and patterns, it is quite tricky to distinguish Chromodoris willani, Chromodoris lochi, Chromodoris dianae and Chromodoris boucheti. Chromodoris willani is easier to differentiate from the other three.
Apparently Chromodoris lochi and Chromodoris dianae have different number and shape of gills but this isn't always easy to notice by laymen. The 'easier' external characteristic differences to spot are as follows:
Chromodoris willani has translucent translucent rhinophores and gills, with tiny white dots on them.
Chromodoris boucheti has yellow tipped rhinophores, but with a special pattern in the yellow tipped gills: there is a vertical black line in the middle of each gill running from the base up. The mantle of Chromodoris boucheti is uniformly colored and smooth looking, without any white specks.
Chromodoris lochi has a rather elongated body of the Hypselodoris genus. It has pink or yellow tinted rhinophores and gills which are sometimes translucent (but with no white dots like in Chromodoris willani). The mantle of Chromodoris lochi is uniformly colored and smooth looking, without any white specks. Its dark/black elongate band in the mantle is thin and unbroken.
Chromodoris dianae also has pale blue based gills and rhinophores, with orange yellow or deep yellow tips, but has more of an oval body form of true Chromodoris genus. Its mantle has white specks or dots hence not smooth looking. The black band in Chromodoris dianae are thicker and discontinuous, especially around the rhinophores.