Chromodoris burni
Rudman, 1982
Order: NUDIBRANCHIA
Suborder: DORIDINA
Superfamily: EUDORIDOIDEA
Family: Chromodorididae
DISTRIBUTION
North Queensland, Australia
PHOTO
Broadhurst Reef, off Townsville, Qld, Australia. AM C102294 (5mm long preserved). [Fig 1F, Rudman, 1982] Photo: I. Loch
The mantle is elongate oval with the edges held close to the sides of the body. It is white with a pattern of thin black lines running longitudinally. The lines external to the gills and rhinophores run completely around the mantle parallel to the edge. There is a band of orange at the mantle edge and inside this is a broad band of white. The rhinophore pocket is white with an orange border. The rhinophore stalk is white and the club orange. The gills are arranged in a horseshoe open posteriorly. They are simple and in the specimens examined arranged number six or seven. The gills are white with orange edges and on the inside of the basal half of each gill there is a black double line. In some specimens the whole of the distal half of each gill is orange. The side of the body is white with thin black lines. The edge of the foot is orange, the colour being most intense posteriorly.
Reference:
• Rudman, W.B. (1982) The Chromodorididae (Opisthobranchia: Mollusca) of the Indo-West Pacific: Chromodoris quadricolor, C. lineolata and Hypselodoris nigrolineata colour groups. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 76: 183-241.
Rudman, W.B., 2003 (October 20) Chromodoris burni Rudman, 1982. [In] Sea Slug Forum. Australian Museum, Sydney. Available from http://www.seaslugforum.net/factsheet/chroburn