Hermissenda opalescens

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Hermissenda opalescens
Hermissenda opalescens in Twin Lakes, California
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Order: Nudibranchia
Suborder: Cladobranchia
Family: Myrrhinidae
Genus: Hermissenda
Species:
H. opalescens
Binomial name
Hermissenda opalescens
Cooper, 1863[1]

Hermissenda opalescens, also known as the opalescent nudibranch or opalescent sea slug, is a species of brightly coloured sea slug or nudibranch, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Facelinidae.[2]

This nudibranch was described from San Diego, California, United States.[1] It has been reported from Northern California, to Punta Eugenia, Mexico. Its distribution overlaps with Hermissenda crassicornis in Northern California and this latter species is found north to Alaska.[2] These two species were routinely treated as a single species during the last 90 years.[3]

The species has also been observed in Bahia de los Angeles, Gulf of California.

Habitat

This sea slug is found in various habitats, including the intertidal zone of rocky shores, but also in bays and estuaries.

Description

The species grows to be about 50 mm, or about 2 inches.

This slug has been treated as a model organism and used in studies into classical conditioning, memory consolidation and associative learning, the structure of neural circuits and neural physiology. It has also been used to investigate ultrastructure and anatomy, larval and reproductive ecology, behavioral ecology and pharmacology and toxicology including studies into Beta thymosins. Unfortunately these studies did not differentiate between the three species of Hermissenda.[2]

Life habits

References

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