Thanks guys, I would have expected an answer to a technical Land Rover question in such record time, but I'm very impressed with the marine nomenclature expertise
Hopefully I'll soon have a travel article with some pics to submit from this road trip
It would have been amazing to see a 40cm version of one of these
better video here...
but I'm unconvinced it would be the same species in such a different oceanic zone as to my understanding the 'spanish dancer' is more of a tropical water species than a cold temperate such as found from the waters of South Australia which have swept up from the southern ocean.
Probably the same family but the OP's video is not clear enough to distinguish the major morphological variances between the members of the cryptobranchia taxon. e.g. retractable gills (or not), juvenile or adult etc etc - I'd assume it is juvenile so the colours may not be representative of the adult, but you never know...
Former marine biologist - oh how I wish I was still doing it as a paid job
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zgrkPZ-Q8rI&feature=player_embedded"]YouTube- Spanish Dancer[/ame]
Reminded me of the "spanish dancer" too.
I've renamed the youtube video to reflect my newfound knowledge, so now it's at :
YouTube - landrover109siii's Channel
Thanks again everyone
My first thought was a flatworm (platyhelminthes) from its shape, but I've never seen one moving like that. However there is a video of a leopard flatworm moving like that on youtube;
[ame="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCH37KI_R_E&NR=1"]YouTube- Leopard Flatworm[/ame]
Nudibranchs have prominent gills on their back which you can see in the video of the spanish dancer. I can't really see any gills in your video?? It also looks "flatter" than a spanish dancer??...but then again I've never seen a spanish dancer.
Nice little video clip by the way.
Cheers
Mark
Well I thought it was a bird of paradise! LOL Seriously this forum rocks!
The beast is almost certainly a flat worm and not a Spanish Dancer. Don't know what species but will check some references when I get to work tomorrow.
Cheers
KarlB
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I want to know how it tasted.
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