Dermatobranchus in aquaria
February 6, 2003
From: Ron Shimek
Hi,
I found about half a dozen of these animals in an aquarium. So... I have no idea of original locality. It could literally be anywhere in the tropics. They are living at 27 deg C.
The animals are about a centimeter long, and a millimeter wide. They look like white Armina, but with no ridges on the back. The rhinophores are brown speckled on a white background and have 3-4 raised ridges in a more-or-less helical pattern.
Ron Shimek
rshimek@imt.net
Shimek, R., 2003 (Feb 6) Dermatobranchus in aquaria. [Message in] Sea Slug Forum. Australian Museum, Sydney. Available from http://www.seaslugforum.net/find/9127Dear Ron,
Your animal is a species of Dermatobranchus, which is closely related to the genus Armina. Most species feed on soft corals, and they seem to be a fairly common hitchhiker, travelling, probably as inconspicuous juveniles, on the soft-corals which are collected in the tropics for the aquarium trade. I guess if you have them then you have the right soft-coral for them to feed on. Whether you remove them from your aquarium depends on whether you prize them more than their food.
Best wishes,
Bill Rudman
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