A Field Guide to the Nudibranchs of the British Isles
By
Bernard E. Picton and Christine C. Morrow
Introduction
This guide is intended for divers, underwater photographers, naturalists exploring the seashore and anyone who wants to know a little more about the animals found around the coasts of the British Isles. It is illustrated with photographs of living indi- viduals wherever possible, and is the first book to illustrate most of the British nudibranchs with photographs as opposed to paintings or drawings. The text has been kept as un- technical as possible and glos- saries are provided to help with specialised terms and latin names. All of the nudibranchs known from the British Isles are covered together with a few which do not have names at present. A list of further reading is included for those who wish to delve further into nudi- branch biology.
The name nudibranch means 'inaked gill" the name refers to 'inaked gill" the name refers to the external respiratory organs, such as the branchial plume of dorid nudibranchs (fig 1), the club-like processes found in the aeolids and dendronotids (figs 2 & 3) and the club-like, leaf- like or arborescent processes of arminaceans located along the sides of the body or in a lateral groove (fig 4). Nudibranchs belong to a class of molluscs called the gastropods, this class is divided into three subclasses; the pro- sobranchs (e.g. the common whelk, the periwinkle and the limpet); the pulmonates (air Nudibranchs of the British Isles breathing snails and slugs, e.g. garden and pond snails and slugs) and the opisthobranchs (commonly known as sea slugs). Both the opisthobranchs and the pulmonates are descendants of the prosobranchs.
Nudibranchs are opisthobranch molluscs in which the adult stage has completely lost both the shell and operculum. They share this character with the plant-eating sacoglossa or ascoglossa, which are not covered here. The loss of the shell has allowed a diverse array of body forms within this order. The Nudibranchia is divided into the following four suborders; the Dendronotacea, Doridacea, Arminacea and Aeolidacea. Approximately 108 described species occur around the British Isles.
The technical terms used in this book to describe the main morphological features of nudibranchs are illustrated in figures I to 4 and listed in the glossary (page 23).
Contents
■ Introduction
- Food and Feeding
- Reproduction
- Finnding Nudibranchs
- Recording
- Conservation and Collecting
- Anatomy
- Glossary of technical terms
- Glossary of Latin names
■ Species Descriptions
- Dendronotacea
- Doridacea
- Arminacea
- Aeolidiacea
ساحة النقاش