Showing posts with label micro-rock-pooling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label micro-rock-pooling. Show all posts

Monday, April 4, 2011

Micro-rock-pooling: an Intertidal Insect

There aren’t many insect species that live in the intertidal zone. The two you’re most likely to encounter are the springtail called Anurida maritima that scoots across the surface of rock pools on the upper shore and seaweed flies Coelopa frigida that breed in vast numbers in the rotting heaps of seaweed that pile up on the strandline. Even fewer insects complete their life cycle actually submerged in salt water but one is this little chironomid midge called Clunio marinus, that I found amongst the fronds of Cladophora seaweed in rockpools on the beach at Whitburn near Sunderland yesterday.


This specimen was about 5mm. long and living in a tube constructed from fine sand grains amongst the fronds of the seaweed.



It fed by hauling itself through the branches of the seaweed using two short leg-like appendages just behind the head.


The midge larva seemed to be nibbling away at much smaller organisms that encrusting the fronds, using a pair of pointed jaws. As far as I could tell it didn’t eat any of the seaweed – just the organisms that encrusted it.


Chironomid midges are extremely common in fresh water, breeding in vast numbers on ponds and even in small bodies of water like waterbutts in gardens. This species, though, as evolved to survive the rigours of life in salt water rockpools on the middle and upper seashore, where temperature and salinity levels can be extremely variable.

You can find a web site devoted to chironomid midge biology here

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

A Seaweed Microcosm....

If you want to explore exotic marine life in shallow seas you could jet off to a warm climate and scuba dive over a coral reef.......or you could just nip along to your nearest stretch of coastline (in our case Whitburn, near the mouth of the River Wear at Sunderland), collect a few small pieces of red seaweed and some seawater, take it home and examine it under the microscope.

This (below) is the piece of seaweed in question, floating in a rockpool.......



....and these (below) are just a few of the animals that I found living in it...




..First to break cover were these little crustaceans called isopods (which literally means 'equal legs' - all their legs are the same length - woodlice are terrestrial isopods). These are highly active little detritus feeders, breathing through gills at their tail end, and belong to a genus called Idotea..






..and they were swiftly followed by this little amphipod (meaning legs of two distinct lengths, long ones at the front, shorter at the back) which emerged from the waving weed fronds. Note the exquisite eyes of these little shrimp-like animals, known as gammarids...(more of those eyes in a future blog).....Whereas isopods tend to be flattened dorsiventrally (i.e. top-to-bottom), amphipods tend to be flatted laterally (side-to-side).







It soon became apparent that the thicker parts of the seaweed were covered with colonies of another phylum of animals called bryozoans (literally 'moss-animals'). These live colonially, interconnected, in little calcareous compartments. In the case of this species, each individual's shell was performated with holes, like an exquisite microscopic ceramic vase. The magnification used here is roughly x50Bryozoans (I haven't identified this species for certain yet, but I think it's Electra pilosa) feed by waving a tentacled arm called a lophophore, that looks a little like an old-fashioned wire egg whisk.


You can see extended lophophores (rather indistinctly, I'm afraid) in the following couple of photos.......




 ....The third phylum of animal to put in an appearance under the microscope (so far we've had crustaceans and bryozoans) was this exquite little sea slug, known as a nudibranch, which belongs to a genus called Eubranchus. Fully extended, this was about 3mm. long - a juvenile, that will probably grow to five or six times this size. Nudibranches are carnivores and it may well have been feeding on the lophophores of some of those bryozoans, although they typically feed on hydroid colonies (more about them in a future post). The back of this nudibranch is covered with strange, skittle shaped objects that wobble from side-to-side as it glides through the water. They're called cerata and are for gas exchange (nudibranch means 'naked gills' and that, in effect, is what these are). Remarkably, some species of nudibranch that feed on hydroids that are armed with stinging nematocysts (for more on nematocysts, see http://cabinetofcuriosities-greenfingers.blogspot.com/2009/09/flower-animal.html) can incorporate the nematocysts of their prey into the body wall of their own cerata, to protect themselves. Nudibranches detect their prey using incredibly sensitive organs called rhinophores, which are the top pair of tentacles at the head end. The pictures below are all of the same animal, but the lighting varies.









So there you have it.........a whole community of weird and wonderful microscopic animals living in a single frond of red seaweed in a rockpool. I spent a couple of very enjoyable hours photographing these but I've not doubt that I could have spent another day, extracting more microscopic marine life, before I exhausted the possibilities of this microcosm. There's a short video of the nudibranch on a separate post, above this one.You can find out more about all of these animals at http://www.marlin.ac.uk/species.php