Thursday, September 22, 2011

Bafflement

Due to some trouble with Lene's flight and mine, I've spent something like 12 hours just waiting in the Anchorage airport today.  Besides getting to spend a little more time together before we part ways, the only perk of spending time in an airport is the fantastic people watching.

I'm sitting across from a family as I write this and they are apparently on the same flight as I am which connects in Houston.  One of the middle aged women in the family mentioned that she hoped they had a wheel chair for her in Houston because she gets so out of breath walking around.  The rest of the family then showed up with bags of McDonalds for everyone.  People can be amazing sometimes.

Edit: I went to McDonalds right after that.

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

Creature feature: Opalescent Nudibranch

One of the more beautiful creatures we find in our tidepools is the Opalescent Nudibranch or Hermissenda Crassicornis.  This organism has several adaptations (some of which I mentioned in an earlier post on Mollusks) that make it particularly interesting.  Most impressive is the nudibranch's ability to 'steal' stinging cells from its prey and pass them untriggered to the tips of its cerrata (the orange tipped structures on its back).    

Click to enlarge

As they live less than a year, they must go through their life cycle quickly and seem to do so without respect for the seasons.  Being hermaphrodites, nudibranchs can self-fertilize or mate with any other nudibranch of the same species though they usually choose the latter option (presumably to ensure the diversity of their gene pool).  

Another species, the Barnacle-eating Nudibranch, seen out of water
When tide-pooling, we often find opalescent nudibranchs close to the water line tucked away in rock crevices or sticking to pieces of kelp.  Searching amongst hydroids, one of their main food sources, is another way to increase the chances of an encounter with this nudibranch.  If you do find a sea slug and it is out of water, it is nice to have a small specimen jar or large clam shell that you can fill so as to observe the nudibranch in all its glory.  Be careful though, nudibranchs are delicate animals and cannot withstand rough handling.

Sources:
Monterey bay aquarium
Puget Sound Sealife