N is for Nudibranch

nudibranch abc makeyevN is for Nematocyst Nipping Nudibranchs

Scientifice name: Chromodoris elizabethina (left) & Chromodoris annulata

Tagalog: Dugo Dugo

“Nudis” are a brightly beautiful group of sea snails without shells. When you are a tiny, squishy sea creature with out a shell, you can feel a little nude and unprotected. Anemones don’t have shells either but they do have stingers. Nudis have a special way to collect anemone stingers (aka nematocyts).

First they go up to the anemone and touch it to make sure it is really an anemone. Then they retreat back to a safe distance. Next, they charge back to the anemone and start munching on the dangerous tentacles, they swallow the stingers and absorb their power. Soon the little Nudi is able to sting like an anemone.  This is why Nudibranchs eat the poisonous stingers off of anemone tentacles. Stingers are not just delicious treat for these brilliant little sea slugs.

A is for Anemone

Anemone watercolor
A is for Anemone
~by Claudia Makeyev

I am an Anemone,

A tentacled beast at the bottom of the sea.

It is a beautiful place with a lot of space,

And it used to get quite lonely.

One day a clownfish and some Zooxanthelae

floated by, nestled in and came to live with me.

We are now a happy, multi-species family.

The Anemone, the Clownfish and the Zooxanthellae are a symbiotic threesome found all over the reefs of Palawan.

The Mermaid Islands Corp is coming out with a fun fact filled Alphabet book of the sea creatures we have found in Palawan. Bright watercolors and ocean critter stories promise to be entertaining to mermaids and kids alike. Enjoy these teasers and stay tuned for more updates on how to reserve your book.

Banan = Tagalog/Tagbanua name for Anemone