Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp..  The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species.  Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony.  World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)."  Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is."  She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."  

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony.  One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009.  The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see.  After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms.  Their identity has not yet been determined.  But they appear to be common.  This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified:   http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Goniodoris castanea south Lihou causeway 100509 ©RLLord 4069 smg
Aplysia punctata BG 140209 1802 smg
This hover fly larva and cocoon was found by Harvey Adams in a somewhat fetid upper-shore tide pool in the splash zone at Portelet on Guernsey's west coast on the 1 August 2008.  These larvae are known as rat tailed larvae because of the 'tail' which is actually a breathing tube. These larvae develop in pools with an abundance of decaying organic matter so the breathing tube is required to obtain oxygen from the atmosphere.  Entomologist Dr. Charles David of the Guernsey Biological Records Centre   http://www.biologicalrecordscentre.gov.gg/   wrote that as "they are in a rock pool they are more likely to be Eristalinus aeneus, which is common round the coast."  Dr. Charles David pointed me to this link for more information:   
http://www.hoverfly.org.uk/viewtopic.php?p=391&sid=8fe30d9fbd69f74e7eff1b9575f6c547

File No. 010808 6273
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Xantho juvenile CW 21 4 mm BG 090208 2965 smg
This image shows a juvenile xanthid crab which was living in a large tide pool in Belle Greve Bay.  This individual is the smallest xanthid crab I have seen with a carapace width of 21.4 mm.  I believe it is Xantho incisus which is chocolate brown as an adult with black tipped claws.
File No. BG 090208 2964 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
This is a montage of images from Belle Greve Bay and the Queen Elizabeth II marina on Guernsey's east coast in the Channel Islands.  The main photograph is of a tide pool in Belle Greve Bay.  The old, discarded tire and the broken battery were photographed on the lower shore in Belle Greve Bay.  They were exposed by a low tide.  The two adult shanny (family blennidae) are native to Belle Greve Bay.  The juvenile shanny was found in the QE II marina which opens onto the southern shore of Belle Greve Bay.  The coke can was photographed floating in the QE II marina.

2007 marine life New Year card 
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
My first visit of the year to the Belle Greve Bay shore was on 24th January 2008.  Unexpectedly I didn't find any long-spined sea scorpion, Taurulus bubalis, eggs on the shore.  I found only one bright red female sculpin with a swollen abdomen so spawning appears to be delayed this year.  The sea temperature is about 0.5 C cooler than last year because of a cold spell during December.  

What I did find was this sea hare, Aplysia depilans.  I turned over a boulder in a muddy and gravel bottomed shallow pool and found a brown gelatinous ball, which was larger than the size of my fist attached to its base.  Initially I thought it could be a holdfast of the brown kelp, Furbelows, Saccorhiza polyschides, but it dawned on me that it was a sea hare.  

The common sea hare on our shore is Aplysia punctata but I realised this was different and it could only be Aplysia depilans because Aplysia fasciata, which was seen in the neighbouring island of Jersey recently, has parapodia that are not fused posteriorly.  

The last time I saw Aplysia depilans was when commercial fisherman Clive Brown found a 242 gram specimen floating dead in St. Peter Port harbour in 21 September 1998 - See  http://www.glaucus.org.uk/news3.htm    They certainly are much more beautiful and exotic when alive. 

I collected this individual from the base of the rock and placed it in a neighbouring tide pool with clear water for photography.  I then took it home for film photography in an aquarium and to weigh it.   It weighed 162 grams.  I returned it to a tide pool on the Belle Greve Bay shore the following day when I took the last two images in this series of Aplysia depilans photos.
File No. 240108 2491 

©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
This common Guernsey sea hare, Aplysia punctata, which usually arrives on the Guernsey shore to reproduce and lay spawn in March and April is seen gliding through a tuft of red seaweed, Calliblepharis jubata.  In front of its oral tentacles is a flat or purple top shell, Gibbula umbilicalis.   The parapodia are edged in white as are the rhinophores and the oral tentacles.  The eyes are tiny.  Photographed in a rock pool in Belle Greve Bay on the 25 January 2008.
File No.  BG 250108 2549
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey
Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp.. The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species. Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony. World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)." Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is." She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony. One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009. The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see. After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms. Their identity has not yet been determined. But they appear to be common. This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified: http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp..  The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species.  Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony.  World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)."  Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is."  She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."  

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony.  One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009.  The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see.  After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms.  Their identity has not yet been determined.  But they appear to be common.  This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified:   http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
Three flatworms are in this photograph of a small area of a compound ascidian (or sea squirt) Botrylloides sp.. The native species of this ascidian is Botrylloides leachi but the invasive ascidian Botrylloides violaceus is spreading in the English Channel and it is not yet known whether this ascidian colony is the invasive species or the native species. Dr. John Bishop and Dr. Gretchen Lambert tell me that the easiest way to tell the ascidian colonies apart is by looking at the ascidian larvae, which are not visible in this colony. World authority on ascidians, Dr. Gretchen Lambert wrote "I also wondered if the orange Botrylloides is Botrylloides violaceus. I looked very carefully at the photo but there are no visible brooded embryos, which are the best way to tell this species (apart from the native species Botrylloides leachi)." Dr. Lambert recommends that I collect some colonies, tear them apart carefully, and look for huge brooded larvae in the tunic. "They will usually be pink, no matter what the colour of the colony is." She writes "Botrylloides violaceus colonies are always a solid color--all orange, or all purple, etc. The larvae are more than 1 mm in diameter, spherical, and when mature have 24-32 lateral ampullae arranged in parallel around the anterior end like a little mop. In Botrylloides leachi the larvae are small, and brooded inside the zooids and not in the tunic."

There appear to be two species of flatworm in this image of a close-up of the ascidian colony. One of the flatworms is gliding over another and heading to the lower right of the image. This image was taken south of the Lihou Island causeway on Guernsey's west coast on the 10 May 2009. The cryptic coloration of the flatworms makes them difficult to see. After 14 years of rock pooling on Guernsey's coast this is the first time I have noticed these flatworms. Their identity has not yet been determined. But they appear to be common. This link provides a possible identification, which remains to be verified: http://www.rzuser.uni-heidelberg.de/~bu6/flat0482.html
File No. 100509 3973
©RLLord
fishinfo@guernsey.net
See photo in original gallery.