The Hermissenda crassicornis is one of the most beautiful of all the invertebrates. Its length is 3 and 1/4 inches long, on average, and its width, 3/8 inches. The distinctive colors of the H. crassicornis are bluish-white with an orange line down the middle of its back. The margins have pale electric blue lines. These colors are mainly carotenoids and carotenoproteins. There are two pair of tentacles (rhinophores) located on the top of the head. The first pair has blue lines, and the second pair is bluish with raised rings. In the middle, there are numerous finger-like projections, called cerata, in two clusters on each side of the back. These projections are brilliantly colored in bright orange with a white tip on each ceratum. The coloration of the H. crassicornis serves as a great identification factor for the species.
Unlike most other Mollusks, the H. crassicornis lack a shell, mantle cavity, and original gill.
(Meinkoth 1981)
Other Physical Features: ectothermic ; bilateral symmetry
H. crassicornis can be found around tidepools, and on rocks, pier pilings, and mudflats. It can also be found from low-tide line water to water 110 feet deep.
(Pearse,et al 1989)
Hermissenda crassicornis are commonly found in areas of the West Coast of North America from Kodiak Island, Alaska to Baja California, Mexico. They are benthic organisms that can be found crawling on rocks, seaweed, and various other substrates on the ocean floor.
(Meinkoth 1981)
Biogeographic Regions: nearctic (Native )
Hermissenda crassicornis feed on a wide variety of animals, such as hydroids, sponges, corals, and many other types of invertebrates. In some instances, they can become cannibalistic, eating other nudibranchs. The H. crassicornis will fight each other, struggling to bite chunks of tissue from each other.
Studies have been done that indicated that H. crassicornis locates its food by chemotaxis. This study also looked at the most profitable food items for H. crassicornis The feeding experiments demonstrated that a diet of Turbularia resulted in a higher growth rate in the H. crassicornis than any of the other organisms used in the experiments, such as Ciona viscera or mussels. These last two organisms are most likely used for maintenance diets.
(Tyndale, et al 1994)
Hermissenda crassicornis is a great subject for study on the cellular level. H. crassicornis has been used as a biomedical research model for many physiological properties, such as learning and memory studies. It has also been used as a model for lead toxicity studies. In these studies, lead significantly reduced the ability for H. crassicornis to undergo associative conditioning and effected the ability for H. crassicornis to aquire associative learning. The behavioral studies can be related to identifiable cells in the ganglia of the head.
(Tyndale, et al 1994, Kuzirian, et al 1996)
Hermissenda crassicornis is a hermaphrodite, possessing both male and female organs. Self-fertilization is a very rare occurance among the H. crassicornis. Most mate, and then lay their eggs near their food source. The H. crassicornis can lay a wide range of eggs on a strand, containing from a few to a million. The maturation of the egg is highly influenced by temperature and can take as little as 5 days or as long as 50 days. The development of the egg is most favorable in warm temperatures. The egg develops into a larval stage called a veliger that floats around on the ocean floor until environmental conditions cause the veliger to settle and develop into adult form.
Recent experiments have determined that the H. crassicornis produce long-term planktotrophic velliger larva. They are unable to metamorphosize for at least three weeks. The best time for inducing metamorphosis is at approximately day 41 to 50 in an egg mass. This varies, however, within the different egg masses. Studies show that this is most likely due to the gradual aquisition of metamorphic competence.
(Avila 1998, Nordin 1996)
Hermissenda crassicornis, also known as the opalescent nudibranch or thick-horned nudibranch, is a species of brightly coloured, sea slug or nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Facelinidae.[1]
This nudibranch lives from Kodiak Island, Alaska, to Northern California. It is replaced by Hermissenda opalescens to the south of Northern California.[2]
The species grows to be about 50 mm, or about 2 inches. The colour of this nudibranch varies from one locality to another, but it is always easily recognizable by the orange stripe along its head area as well as the white stripes on the cerata and those running down the mantle.[3][4]
This nudibranch prefers to feed on tunicates (such as ascidians), but overall has a diverse diet, also consuming hydroids, anthozoans, crustaceans, other nudibranchs, dead animals, and the polyps of jellyfish (theoretically, they may also consume stranded adult jellyfish too, if accessible). One study theorizes that H. crassicornis feeds only minimally on cnidarians (such as hydroids) either just to obtain defensive nematocysts in complement to their main diet, or because cnidarians are simply too toxic to consume in large quantities. [5] It sometimes attacks other nudibranchs, and will even eat smaller specimens of its own species.
This species is found in various habitats, including the intertidal zone of rocky shores, but also in bays and estuaries.
Hermissenda crassicornis, also known as the opalescent nudibranch or thick-horned nudibranch, is a species of brightly coloured, sea slug or nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Facelinidae.
Hermissenda crassicornis est une espèce de mollusques de la classe des gastéropodes, la seule espèce du genre Hermissenda.
C'est un petit nudibranche éolidien mesurant entre 3 et 5cm, avec une silhouette effilée vers une longue queue pointue. Son corps est le plus souvent d'un blanc transparent émargé de bleu iridescent, sur lequel se détachent bien les couleurs de ses différents appendices. Les nombreux cérates dorsaux (appendices servant à la respiration et à la digestion) sont vivement colorés, et peuvent être rouges, bruns, violets ou orangés, avec la pointe très colorée (généralement jaune orangé). Ils sont généralement réunis en grappes, et laissent souvent voir par transparence les prolongements de l'appareil hépato-digestif qui s'y terminent, de couleur généralement pourpre, ainsi qu'en période de ponte les boules formées par les glandes génitales situées à la base des cérates. Le dos est parfois orné d'un motif bleu luminescent. La tête, de la même couleur que le corps, est bien marquée, et présente des rhinophores (appendices sensoriels) d'un blanc laiteux séparés par une bande jaune vif, et de longs tentacules buccaux de la même couleur que le corps et parcourus par un trait blanc très lumineux.
On trouve ces nudibranches sur les côtes Est du Pacifique, de l'Alaska au Mexique. Elle vit entre la surface et quelques dizaines de mètres de profondeur (y compris dans la zone intertidale). On en trouve sur fonds rocheux dans une grande diversité de biotopes, et jusque dans les estuaires.
H. crassicornis est parfois utilisée comme espèce modèle en laboratoire. Elle a par exemple été utilisée pour montrer qu'un neurotoxique comme le plomb (facteur de saturnisme chez l'homme et chez l'animal) affectait aussi la capacité d'apprentissage d'animaux dont le système nerveux est plus « primitif »[1].
Hermissenda crassicornis est une espèce de mollusques de la classe des gastéropodes, la seule espèce du genre Hermissenda.
Hermissenda crassicornis (Eschscholtz, 1831) è un mollusco nudibranchio della famiglia Myrrhinidae.[1]
Hermissenda crassicornis (Eschscholtz, 1831) è un mollusco nudibranchio della famiglia Myrrhinidae.
Hermissenda crassicornis is een slakkensoort uit de familie van de Facelinidae.[1] De wetenschappelijke naam van de soort is voor het eerst geldig gepubliceerd in 1831 door Eschscholtz.
Bronnen, noten en/of referentiesエムラミノウミウシ(学名: Hermissenda crassicornis)は、アオミノウミウシ科の小さく鮮やかな色をしたウミウシ(海生腹足類軟体動物)の一種である。
本種はおよそ50 mmに成長する。色は場所によって差異があるが、背中に沿ったオレンジの縞で常に容易に見分けがつく。
このウミウシは北はアラスカのコディアック島から南はメキシコのプンタ・エウヘニアにまで生息している。本種はカリフォルニア湾のバイア・デ・ロス・アンヘレス(英語版)や日本でも観察されている[1]。
日本においては北海道から本州沿岸に知られるが、伊豆半島以南ではきわめて希で、日本海側や東北以北では普通にみられる[2]。
エムラミノウミウシは、磯の潮間帯や入江、三角江を含む様々な生息地で見ることができる。
エムラミノウミウシは、クラゲ期のヒドロ虫、ホヤおよびイソギンチャクといったその他の海洋動物を餌とする。他のウミウシを攻撃することもあり、同種のより小さな個体を捕食することもある。