I think this ID is right but I haven't seen this color pattern before.
Please help on the species if you can! It was on algae, crawling like a nudibranch and about a centimeter long. I have more photos of different angles if that would be helpful
I would have walked right by this guy, but I heard him carrying on. Maybe protecting a nest?
@anudibranchmom no clue!
moved like a nudibranch in my opinion, could have sworn i saw gills while photographing but they could've retracted.
pretty small, disappeared into the algae
Not sure which species but appears to be genus Abedus. Would love to get some feedback from an expert!
Officially the smallest snail I’ve ever seen! With 2 other snails in the 3rd pic.
2 of them making quite the ruckus this morning
Youtube Video of them: https://youtu.be/ybDRfWRvBS8
A truly amazing encounter with one of the world's most enigmatic ungulates. When I first saw this Pygmy Hippo, it was resting on the ground a few meters off the trail, covered with sweat droplets. After about an hour of waiting, it got up and slowly walked through the forest. It did not appear to mind my presence.
It may be too small for this species, but I couldn't find anything else that came close.
I think it's an anenome. It was floating on the top of the water but it looks upside down. Cool!
I haven't the foggiest idea what this is. UV-fluorescent organism, or non-organism...?... found on the W-facing side of a cinder block wall, noticed due to high fluorescence, while I was using a UV flashlight to hunt lichens. Thing is attached to the mortar between bricks. I would remove the thing to dissect and investigate further, but I'm not sure this isn't some kind of extraterrestrial life that will kill me if I handle it too much (99% joking there). What the hell is this thing? Texture rather hard, and crispy, not fleshy. Observed following a decent amount of precipitation on the same day.
Photos # 1-3 taken under UV light in near total darkness otherwise, and photos # 4-5 taken under illumination with a white LED lamp. Coin used for scale is a US quarter dollar (¢25 piece), 24.26 mm, 0.955 inch in diameter. Each line on the edge of the coin is approximately 0.64 mm apart.
Update (29 Dec 2022): Inspected the putative life-form further, and removed the donut-shaped structure from the large mass, and the larger mass from the wall. The donut-shaped structure was relatively easy to separate, as was the larger mass from the wall. Face, and backside fluorescent under UV, as well as the inside of the larger mass (not pictured under UV here). The donut-shaped structure was hardened, and fragile, and shattered into pieces when I accidentally dropped it on a tile floor.
Can anyone help me with this species? A juvenile chiton, no doubt, but which one?
Bearded clingfish on Watersipora bryozoan under Stearn's Wharf in Santa Barbara, Ca. Depth about 16' / 5M. Water temperature 52 degrees.
Observed this Spider feeding on what looks to be a Western Honey Bee.
"Females of the green lynx spider, Peucetia viridans (Hentz), generally match their background when they are gravid. In the laboratory, P. viridans can change components of its colour to match green, purple, yellow and white backgrounds. This ability should offer a selective advantage against visual predators.
Coloration and pattern can vary on the abdomen, often due to habitat or the age (instar) of the spider, but is typically a bright green color (can be reddish-pink or purple in some individuals). Most specimens also have pairs of white and/or burgundy diagonal lines down the center of the abdomen, which point forward towards the 'head' of the spider.
May actively stalk its prey, running and jumping from branch to branch with ease, which is how it earned the nickname lynx spider.
Spiders are apparently capable of changing their body color to adapt to their environment (ranges from various shades of green, brown, and reddish-purple or pink).”
More information at> https://spiderid.com/spider/oxyopidae/peucetia/viridans/
I observed this camouflaged caterpillar on a California Buckwheat flower. The first photo seems to be just a California Buckwheat, but a closer look(see Yellow arrow) shows the Synchlora aerata caterpillar camouflaged with California Buckwheat flowers on the flower. A second photo taken at a prior date, shows why this caterpillar is referred to as the Camouflaged Looper caterpillar.
"The caterpillars of the Wavy-lined Emerald moth disguise themselves with their own camouflage from the plants they feed on. Their Pupa also use plant pieces as camouflage for part of its cocoon."
3 species of urchin!
Purple, red, and pink I guess...?
Tidepooling. Potential new species found by @chloe_and_trevor and collectively collected.
In the collection container it seemed to munch on some hydroids (photos 4-7).
Same individual as: https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/107604567
Hundreds of these tiny (oral disk around 1 cm across) anemones were in the mud / sand shallows at low tide along the shore of Tomales Bay.