Lined Nembrotha

Nembrotha lineolata

''Nembrotha lineolata'' is a species of nudibranch, a sea slug, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Polyceridae. It is found in shallow water in the Indo-Pacific. It was first described in 1905 by the Danish malacologist Rudolph Bergh. The type locality is Selayar Island, Indonesia.
Nudibranch - Nembrotha lineolatha mating This nudibranch - Nembrotha lineolatha is also another common species to be found in Philippines.
Nudibranch are hermaphrodite, meaning they have both male and female sexual organs.  However, they are not able to fertilise themselves.  Their genital is located on the front right of their body and in order to mate, they do a 69 as shown in the picture.  Their genitalia is mostly retract when they are not courting/mating but when erect, can be quite long. Geotagged,Lined Nembrotha,Nembrotha lineolata,Philippines,Summer,cebu,malapascua,mating

Appearance

''Nembrotha lineolata'' grows to a length of about 70 millimetres . The body is slender with a rounded head at one end and a pointed tip to the foot at the other. The exterior of the body is covered with longitudinal wrinkles and there is no sharp demarcation between the dorsal surface and the lateral surfaces. The oral tentacles are thick and long and the large conical rhinophores bear about thirty lamellae and can be retracted. The three large pinnate branchial plumes on the dorsal surface are non-retractile and the anus is located between them. The colouring of this nudibranch is variable across the animal's range. The body colour is creamy-white with narrow longitudinal lines, some broken, in varying shades of brown. Sometimes these lines merge in places giving transverse bands of colour. There is a blue or purple stripe running round the margin of the foot and often a yellow one as well. The oral tentacles are blue or purple with a yellow band and the rhinophores are red with blue or purple sheaths.
Nudibranch - Nembrotha lineolata  Lined Nembrotha,Mabul,Malaysia,Nembrotha lineolata,Nudibranch,Sabah

Distribution

This is a widespread Indo-Pacific species occurring from the East African coast to Australia, Fiji and the Solomon Islands. Its range includes Bali, Fiji, Palau, Papua New Guinea, Malaysia, Japan, Kerama Islands, Ryukyu Islands, the Philippines, Australia, the Indian Ocean, the Seychelles, Tanzania and the Comoros Islands.
Lined Nembrotha Seen in Dauin, Philippines (Oct 2, 2012).
Length - 4.5cm. This slug's gill plume is large and elevated on a bulbous portion of the notum. The fine lines help distinguish it from other Nembrotha genus nudibranchs. It is rather large for a nudibranch, at nearly two inches. Its diet is said to consist of tunicates. Widespread Western Indo-Pacific. Depth - 5-30m Geotagged,Nembrotha lineolata,Philippines

Behavior

''Nembrotha lineolata'' has been observed feeding on tunicates such as ''Oxycorynia fascicularis'', ''Clavelina'' spp. and ''Rhopalaea'' spp.. It can insert its extensible oral tube through the tunicate's siphon and suck out the soft interior.

It lays its eggs in a yellowish-brown spiral ribbon and it is likely that the larvae that hatch out of these are free-swimming veliger larvae and form part of the plankton. Known predators of nudibranchs include fish, crabs, sea spiders and polychaete worms. There have been two instances when a sea anemone in the Edwardsiidae family has been observed attempting to feed on nudibranchs. In one attack on ''Nembrotha lineolata'', the sea slug flinched whenever it was touched by a tentacle but oozed a great deal of mucus and managed to struggle out of reach. It is unclear whether sea anemones normally prey on sea slugs or whether these are unusual occurrences.

References:

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Taxonomy
KingdomAnimalia
DivisionMollusca
ClassGastropoda
OrderNudibranchia
FamilyPolyceridae
GenusNembrotha
SpeciesN. lineolata