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"Some kind of jelly, abundant around the docks at Moss Landing. The ""body"" was perhaps 5 cm long."
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"Some kind of jelly, abundant around the docks at Moss Landing. The ""body"" was perhaps 5 cm long."
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"Some kind of jelly, abundant around the docks at Moss Landing. The ""body"" was perhaps 5 cm long."
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Could this be another polyorchis?
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Could this be another polyorchis?
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Not exactly well-suited to photography in a white dish, sadly. These were semi-abundant.
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Little Jelly! Anyone know what kind this is?
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Dead.
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Hydroids don't get a lot of love in the human world (nudibranchs are connoisseurs, of course), but they're often some of the most beautiful animals out there. They're also tiny, weird, and kind of hard to to ID. These aren't huge, aren't fouling, and don't have annulations below the medusae, so... Pinauay marina?
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none
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Hydroids don't get a lot of love in the human world (nudibranchs are connoisseurs, of course), but they're often some of the most beautiful animals out there. They're also tiny, weird, and kind of hard to to ID. These aren't huge, aren't fouling, and don't have annulations below the medusae, so... Pinauay marina?
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If you look closely, you can also see two Flabellina trilineata moving through the base of this cluster.
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If you look closely, you can also see two Flabellina trilineata moving through the base of this cluster.
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Here E. larynx grows together with the bigger Tubularia indivisa. The difference is good to see.
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