May. 25th, 2009


  • Starfish: purple, orange, many-legged sunflowers. Very common hiding under moon-snail egg collars. Enormous foot-and-a-half sunflower star unhappily high on the beach.
  • Sea cucumbers, orange-red with fractal feeding tentacles.
  • Anemones, mostly balled up, some red-and-green mottled.
  • Barnacles doing their Jabba tongue thing wherever they're below the waterline.
  • Nudibranchs white-striped on pink-brown. (Armina californica)
  • A one-inch sluggy creature, two "horns", back covered with fingers, streaked black and iridescent green and pink -- some aeolid? Poss. Hermissenda crassicornis?
  • The name sounded like "agagids", prob. "aglajids", Aglaja ocelligera. A boy found one and the beach naturalist was all aglee, agagids agagids, you always see their mucusy egg masses but she'd never seen the animal before. (It must be a good day for them, we found two more once we knew to look closely at shiny blackish oblong pebbles.)
  • Gunnels, many being eaten by crows, one dropped by a crow and wriggled into the mud, the crow pecking at the ground aggrievedly.
  • A little spiral of green on the underside of a moon snail egg: polychaete eggs.
  • Tobiko! Red-orange egg masses attached to seaweed -- sculpin eggs, a naturalist thought -- and one huge agglomerate mass the size of a hat -- gang of sculpins?
  • Flat sunflower-seed-spirally cellule colonies on brown seaweed: bryozoans, Membraniporea membranaceae (or related).
  • turtle turtle turtle duck turtle turtle.

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Eli

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