Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Purple urchin.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Purple urchin."— Presentation transcript:

1 Purple urchin

2

3 Small barnacle

4 Angelic tooth snail

5 Thatchroof barnacle (Tetraclita)

6 Doris’s nudibranch

7 Purple sea urchin

8 sunstar

9 Heliaster, the sunstar, crash in 1978, now returning

10 Lumpy claw crab

11 Swimming clam

12 Mussel

13 Black chiton

14 Twin-spot octopus

15 Small olive snail

16

17

18

19

20

21 Brown carpet anemone

22 Brown carpet anemone

23

24 Cerithium maculosum, speckled cerith

25 Nerita and small barnacles

26

27

28

29

30

31 anisotremus Sonoran goby Gulf opaleye Halichoeres

32 Red algae

33 Sea slug

34 Hypsoblennius gentilis
Malacoctenus gigas

35 clingfish

36 Tadpole clingfish

37 Paraclinus sini Spotted sand bass Paramaculatus fasciatus Tomicodon boelkii

38

39 Cleaning bullseye puffers (“botete”)

40

41

42

43

44

45

46

47

48 Petrolisthes (porcellain crab)

49 Pencil urchin

50 Purple urchin

51 Snapping shrimp (or pistol shrimp)

52 Giant spiny black brittle star

53 Ringed brittle star

54 Bottle sea cucumber (B. impatiens or arenicola)

55 Thatch roof barnacle

56 Tube worms or tube snails

57 White-cored sponge covered with algae

58 Breadcrumb sponge (Porifera)

59 tunicates

60 Golfball sponge

61 Fireworms

62 Palythoa ignota, brown carpet anemone, closed

63 Palythoa ignota, brown carpet anemone, open polyps

64 Samurai hydroid

65 Female and male medusae gonophores

66 Clearings with and without hydroids
hydroid super-glued to rock

67 Hydroid clearings on rock (pox)

68 Beach pill bug Tylos punctatos (isopod that scavenges on dead stuff at highest tideline) Zone 1 indicator

69

70 Zoned fan algae

71

72 Vaquita, the harbor porpoise, Phocoena sinus
endemic to (lives only in) Northern Gulf of California Rare ( individuals left), endangered


Download ppt "Purple urchin."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google