
Appearance
The bodies of nudibranchs in this species are semi-translucent and whitish-grey, and reach lengths of about 35mm. The body is covered in short cerata with brown cores, and the exterior fades to orange and then white at the tip. Its rhinophores have around 20 lamellae and are also white tipped. The cerata in front of the rhinophores are a distinguishing factor between it and other nudibranch species' that are similar in appearance.Naming
Antiopella fuscaDistribution
The species "Janolus fuscus" is found from the Kenai Peninsula, Alaska to central California and also in northern Japan.Habitat
This species of nudibranch is found in intertidal and subtidal zones. These areas are shallow and rocky, and Janolus fuscus do not inhabit spaces deeper than 30m.Predators
In California, "Navanax" is a known predator of "Janolus". "Navanax" tracks the slime of "Janolus" by using chemoreceptors. When "Janolus" is about to be caught, it rolls into a ball, leaving its cerata exposed. If there is a water current, as if often the case, the sea slug may then be passively rolled away from the predator.Janolus fuscus can be infected with a parasitic crustacean called "Ismaila belciki." This is fairly common, and in some monitored populations of the nudibranchs such as Coos Bay, Oregon's, the rate of infection is up to 80%. When I. belciki is present in this species, it is covertly located inside the body cavity so the only portion that can be seen from the outside are egg sacs. The parasite does not interfere with the growth of its host, but it poaches off the sea slug for many functions including taking the nudibranch's resources that it uses for egg production to use for I. belciki's own egg production, making reproduction slow for the host and the survival rate lower as a whole.References:
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