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28 results found

A beautiful Blue Velvet Head Shield sea slug (Chelidonura varians) crawls across a sandy seafloor near Alor in the Lesser Sunda Islands of Indonesia.

Grey Sea Slug (Aeolidia pappillosa), large light coloured nudibranch with many tentacles on back and on indistinct rock background, St Abbs, Scotland, UK North Sea

Unidentified very colourful nidibranch, two together with black sworld and golden spots over white body, French Polynesia

Two emperor shrimp, Periclemenes imperator, catch a ride on a Ceratasoma sp., nudibranch, Bima Bay, Sumbawa Island, Nusa Tenggara, Indonesia, Pacific Ocean

Detail of Forsskal's Pleurobranch (Pleurobranchus forskalii), Backshielded Snail, Nudibranch, Detail, Pacific, Great Barrier Reef, UNESCO World Heritage, Australia, Oceania

Pyjama Chromodoris quadricolor (Chromodoris Quadricolor) Magnificent star snail, nudibranch, Red Sea, Aqaba, Kingdom of Jordan

Nudibranch Eye-spotted warty snail (Phyllidia ocellata) crawls through coral reef in search of food, Indian Ocean, Mascarene Islands, Mauritius, Africa

nudibranch, sea slug, two sea slugs, Hypselodoris bullockii, Malaysia, Pazifik, Pacific ocean, Borneo, Lankayan

(Clione limacina), known as the naked sea butterfly, sea angel is a pelagic sea slug, only few centimeters in length, swim in front of an iceberg, Tasiilaq, East Greenland

BLUE DRAGON (Glaucus atlanticus). A small peacic slug that measures only about 2 cm and is generally associated with the Portuguese frigatebird (Physalia physalis) or the blue button (Porpita porpita) on which it feeds. They can also appear in intertidal pools. Marine invertebrates of the Canary Islands, Tenerife.

Blue Dragon (Glaucus atlanticus) hanging. Small slug that measures only about 2 cm and is generally associated with the Portuguese man of war (Physalia physalis), although it also usually appears in intertidal pools. Marine invertebrates of the Canary Islands, Tenerife.

BLUE DRAGON (Glaucus atlanticus). Small slug that measures only about 2 cm and is generally associated with the Portuguese man of war (Physalia physalis), although it also usually appears in intertidal pools. Marine invertebrates of the Canary Islands, Tenerife.