dcsimg

Look Alikes

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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: The yellow line around the edges, yellow-tipped tubercles, and yellow tips on the rhinophores are distinctive.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Comprehensive Description

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Body usually 25-40 mm, can be 80 mm. Whitish to light yellow. Narrow band of yellow around margin and tips of tubercles are bright yellow. Has bipinnate gills, numbering six. Dorsum feels warty and gritty to touch, due to spicules. How to Distinguish from Similar Species: The yellow line around the edges, yellow-tipped tubercles, and yellow tips on the rhinophores are distinctive.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Habitat

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Common under rocky ledges with sponges and tunicates
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Habitat

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Depth Range: Low-intertidal zone and subtidal to 45m
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Comprehensive Description

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Biology/Natural History: Feeds on sponges, including Halichondria panicea, Myxilla incrustans, and Higginsia sp. According to Baltzley et al.,, many gastropods, including this species, have a special network of pedal ganglia in their foot which assists in crawling. The two main neurons involved produce pedal peptides which elicit an increase in the rate of beating of cilia on the foot, resulting in crawling.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Distribution

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Geographical Range: Vancouver Island to Punta Eugenia
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Cadlina luteomarginata

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Cadlina luteomarginata, common name the yellow-edged cadlina, is a species of colorful sea slug, a dorid nudibranch, a shell-less marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cadlinidae.[1]

This Cadlina luteomarginata is out of the water on the side of a California tidepool, therefore its rhinophores and gills have collapsed against its body.

Distribution

This dorid nudibranch lives in the eastern Pacific from Alaska to Mexico. Reports of this species from the eastern coast of North America, need to be investigated. Currently, there is no concrete evidence that this species occurs in the Atlantic Ocean.

Description

The yellow-edged cadlina is a white, oval-shaped seaslug with yellow projections on the dorsum and a bright yellow rim to the mantle. It shows near the rear end a ring of six yellow-tipped feathery gills and rhinophores. The antennae are comblike. The radula has strongly hooked lateral teeth. Their subepithelial glands are compound and consist of large vacuoles with bluish stained content. Agglomerations of glandular tissue can be found on the apex of the tubercles.[2]

C. luteomarginata produces the twenty-three carbon terpenoid luteone.[3]

Life habits

This species lives under rocks and in tidepools from the intertidal zone to a depth of about 20 m in the circalittoral zone. It eats several species of spiculate sponges and also sponges from the order Dendroceratida. It is preyed upon by seastars, such as Solaster dawsoni.

Footnotes

  • Debelius, H. & Kuiter, R.H. (2007) Nudibranchs of the world. ConchBooks, Frankfurt, 360 pp. ISBN 978-3-939767-06-0 page(s): 212

References

  1. ^ Caballer, M. (2012). Cadlina luteomarginata M[a]cFarland, 1966. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=562476 on 2012-10-01
  2. ^ Defensive glandular structures in Opisthobranch molluscs; page 230 in Oceanography and Marine Biology, annual review, volume 44, 2006
  3. ^ Luteone, a twenty three carbon terpenoid from the dorid nudi branch Cadlina luteomarginata. Jocelyne Hellou and Raymond J. Andersen, Shahin Rafii, Edward Arnold and Jon Clardy, Tetrahedron Letters, Volume 22, Issue 42, 1981, Pages 4173-4176, doi:10.1016/S0040-4039(01)82096-7
  • Behrens, D.W., Pacific Coast Nudibranchs: a guide to the opisthobranchs of the northeastern Pacific, Sea Challenger Books, Washington
  • Johnson R.F. (2011) Breaking family ties: taxon sampling and molecular phylogeny of chromodorid nudibranchs (Mollusca, Gastropoda). Zoologica Scripta 40(2): 137-157. page(s): 139

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Cadlina luteomarginata: Brief Summary

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Cadlina luteomarginata, common name the yellow-edged cadlina, is a species of colorful sea slug, a dorid nudibranch, a shell-less marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cadlinidae.

This Cadlina luteomarginata is out of the water on the side of a California tidepool, therefore its rhinophores and gills have collapsed against its body.
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