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Tide pool trip: March 6 2025:








(From L-R, U-D) 1. Shaggy mouse Aeolid nudibranch, possibly eating or trying to eat an aggregating anemone? 2. Striking electric green Moonglow anemone, (Anthopleura Artemisia) one of the thousands that have colonized on this beach. 3. A small sea lemon (Doris montereyensis) sheltered under a rock with an ochre sea star. 4. A pair of juvenile Mottled stars (evasterias troschelii) sheltered beneath a cobble 5. A stubby rose anemone (utricina Clandestina) in the shell silt in the receding tide. 6. A leather star in a deep tide pool on the reef exposed by low tide. 7. A chiton, possibly mossy chiton, sheltered beneath a beach cobble. 8. The scenery at this location, depicting the reef. (Fairhaven, WA)
#marine ecology#marine biologist#marine biology#marine animal#marine science#marine life#sea life#aquatic life#intertidal zone#tidepooling#tide pools#pnw#pnw photography#marine photography#biology#field recording#citizen science#enchidoderms#nudibranchs#sea anemone#chitons#salish sea
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The Pacific Blood Star



L-R, U-D: a wild specimen clung on a rock at low tide, Victoria, BC. A small individual in the process of limb regeneration, Deception pass, WA. A beached specimen displaying color contrast against substrate, Clallam bay, WA. Pictures by me.
A bright red beauty often spotted along sheltered beaches of the American west coast, the blood star, belonging to the complex Henricia, is not one species, but rather a complex of closely related stars found in the Pacific Ocean ranging from Baja California up to northern Alaska.
These slender, bright vivid carmine seastars can range in color from a deep red to a light orange. They feast on a variety of demosponges and bacteria, which it sweeps into its mouth via ciliated tracts. Like all stars, it also has the unique ability to eject its stomach, which it may use to feed on small sponge and bryozoans by melting them with its acid!
These stars can be found up and down much of the west coast of North America, though different subspecies inhabit different regions.
They can usually be found under cobbles, attached to rocky reefs, or in tide-pools from the intertidal zone up to 400 meters deep! Waow! What an interesting creature!
#marine photography#marine biologist#marine biology#marine ecology#marine life#sea life#ocean life#seastars#enchidoderms#starfish#pnw#pnw photography#educational#marine science#marine animal#biology#tide pools#tide pooling#science#natural science
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