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Rare creature in my refugium


Achilles Tang
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Hi everyone,

I woke up at about 4 plus this morning and was happily looking at my refugium teeming with thousands of pods... and was happily shooting them when I spotted something I saw some time ago... which I thought was an ordinary house spider that dropped into my tank and was drowning.

Imagine to my surprise when I saw it again, swimming in the water!

It looks almost like a land spider and this is it's sea cousin, the Sea Spider!

Here's some of the photos I took this morning:

seaspider1.jpg

seaspider2.jpg

seaspider3.jpg

seaspider4.jpg

That's one thing I love about this hobby... it's even the small things that are fascinating!

;)

More info on sea spiders here and here.

Here's more information on these fascinating creatures:

Sea Hare Predators - Pycnogonids (Sea Spiders)

PHOTO: Pycnogonid, Anoplodactylus evansi. Coffs Harbour Region, northern New South Wales, Australia, Dec 1990. (Leg length = 15mm). PHOTO: Bill Rudman.

Anoplodactylus evansi is a generalist predator of small opisthobranchs, and is reported to attack and feed on small individuals of at least 13 species of anaspidean, sacoglossan and nudibranch gastropods, as well as other soft-bodied invertebrates (Rogers, de Nys, & Steinberg, 2000). It hunts opisthobranchs on benthic algae, immobilizing them with movable claws on the front legs, before consuming them. It eats whole opisthobranchs, including the nudibranchs Bornella stellifer, Austraeolis ornata Angas, 1864, and Spurilla australis Rudman, 1982. Another species, Anoplodactylus carvalhoi has been reported to only eat nudibranch cerata (Piel, 1991).

One of its main food items are juvenile Sea Hares and a recently published report (Cary, et al, 2000) investigated whether the diet-derived compounds in the Sea Hare Aplysia parvula acted as a deterrent against attack. Anoplodactylus evansi was not deterred from feeding on A. parvula by the diet-derived secondary metabolites from the red seaweeds Laurencia obtusa or Delisea pulchra. However, increasing the quantity of metabolites present in A. parvula by treatment with adult extracts did deter A. evansi from feeding, suggesting that high levels of diet-derived materials in sea hares may have deterrent effects against a predator. Aplysia parvula stores the bulk of its acquired algal secondary metabolites in its digestive gland, so pycnogonids would avoid exposure to high concentrations by rejecting this organ, and pycnogonids were sometimes observed rejecting the digestive gland when feeding on Sea Hares.

Although Anoplodactylus evansi has been collected at several sites along the New South Wales coastline, and as far south as Tasmania, its local distribution seems to be very patchy. This is probably a result of its reproductive behaviour in which it broods its young, limiting dispersal to nearby seaweeds. This leads to resident populations of pycnogonids occurring at particular localities. Over a number of years Aplysia parvula was significantly less abundant on the red alga Laurencia obtusa at sites where there was a resident population of the pycnogonid.

Anoplodactylus evansi is able to tolerate low levels of secondary metabolites and feed successfully on a wide variety of small opisthobranchs with different defensive substances. The opisthobranchs investigated here are known to sequester different metabolites and juvenile Aplysia parvula which contained secondary metabolites from the algae Laurencia obtusa or Delisea pulchra, were consumed nonetheless. This pycnogonid can apparently tolerate a variety of secondary metabolites in its diet, including compounds found in sponges, cnidarians, bryozoans, as well as opisthobranchs.

References:

Rogers, C.N., de Nys, R. & Steinberg, P.D. (2000) Predation on juvenile Aplysia parvula and other small Anaspidean, Ascoglossan and Nudibranch Gastropods by Pycnogonids. The Veliger, 43(4): 330-337.

Piel, W. H. 1991. Pycnogonid predation on nudibranchs and ceratal autotomy. The Veliger, 34:366-367.

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I used to have a water spider in my SH tank too...the brown type not the scary blue one!!! :o

Gave me a big shock when I first saw it (was secretly hoping it was an arrow crab)....caught it out n flush it down my toilet bowl.

Not a big fan of spiders... :huh:

I'm gonna break the cycle

I'm gonna shake up the system

I'm gonna destroy my ego

I'm gonna close my body now

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