Anzeige
Fauna Marin GmbH aquarioom.com Whitecorals.com Fauna Marin GmbH All for Reef Tropic Marin

Aplysia oculifera Ocellated Sea Hare, Spotted Sea Hare, Eyed Seahare

Aplysia oculiferais commonly referred to as Ocellated Sea Hare, Spotted Sea Hare, Eyed Seahare. Difficulty in the aquarium: There are no reports available yet that this animal has already been kept in captivity successfully. Toxicity: Toxic hazard unknown.


Profilbild Urheber Sven Kahlbrock, Ägypten

Aplysia oculifera,Muskat, Sultanate of Oman 2011


Courtesy of the author Sven Kahlbrock, Ägypten Sven Kahlbrock. Please visit www.medslugs.de for more information.

Uploaded by Muelly.

Image detail


Profile

lexID:
7467 
AphiaID:
208626 
Scientific:
Aplysia oculifera 
German:
Augenfleck Seehase, Ocellus Seehase, Gepunkteter Seehase 
English:
Ocellated Sea Hare, Spotted Sea Hare, Eyed Seahare 
Category:
Sea Hares 
Family tree:
Animalia (Kingdom) > Mollusca (Phylum) > Gastropoda (Class) > Aplysiida (Order) > Aplysiidae (Family) > Aplysia (Genus) > oculifera (Species) 
Initial determination:
A. Adams & Reeve, 1850 
Occurrence:
China, Corea, Hawaii, India, Indian Ocean, Indo Pacific, Indonesia, Israel, Japan, Malaysia, Philippines, Red Sea, Réunion , Singapore, South-Africa, Sulawesi 
Marine Zone:
Subtidal, sublittoral, infralittoral, deep zone of the oceans from the lower limit of the intertidal zone (intertidal) to the shelf edge at about 200 m water depth. neritic. 
Sea depth:
1 - 27 Meter 
Size:
2.36" - 5.91" (6cm - 15cm) 
Temperature:
19,4 °F - 26,6 °F (19,4°C - 26,6°C) 
Food:
Algae 
Difficulty:
There are no reports available yet that this animal has already been kept in captivity successfully 
Offspring:
None 
Toxicity:
Toxic hazard unknown 
CITES:
Not evaluated 
Red List:
Not evaluated (NE) 
Related species at
Catalog of Life:
 
More related species
in this lexicon:
 
Author:
Publisher:
Meerwasser-Lexikon.de
Created:
Last edit:
2023-12-06 13:00:33 

Info

Aplysia oculifera A. Adams & Reeve, 1850

This sea hare is distributed in Indo-West Pacific.Aplysia oculifera have small brown eye-spots all over the head and the parapodia.The spotted sea hare often seen on sandy sheltered shores among seagrasses, but also can be found to dephts of 10 m.If they feel disturbed,they able to squirt a red ink.

Sea hares feeds on green and red algae (Ulva,Enteromorpha,Laurencia.

Synonymised names:
Aplysia lineolata A. Adams & Reeve, 1850 · unaccepted (junior synonym)
Aplysia nodifera A. Adams & Reeve, 1850 · unaccepted > junior subjective synonym
Tethys hirasei Baba, 1936 · unaccepted

Sea hares feed on algae. They eat various types of algae, kelp and seaweed. In the process, plant parts are rasped off with the rasping tongue (radula). Microscopic food particles are also ingested with the algae. They are often used in aquaristics for algae problems, but with the end of their food they also get nutritional problems.

For protection against predators there are some species that additionally store the toxin aplysiatoxin. This aplysiatoxin is a product of cyanobacteria, which grow on certain types of seaweed. These are ingested along with the algae.

Sea hares are good algae eaters after a usually difficult acclimation period and are also not very picky about the algae. When acclimating, be sure to use the droplet method, as they are extremely sensitive to density fluctuations.

Thus, in addition to the usual filamentous algae, Wrangelia argus and so-called smear algae are often not spurned.
If no more algae are present, then it does not take long and the lumpfish starves to death.

However, you can also offer it over-scalded lettuce as a substitute food, but then you should also look for a substitute home.

Attention, important:
If you want to keep lumpfish, be sure to provide shelter so they don't get caught in a flow pump and shredded.
Dying lumpfish are capable of causing the entire fish and crustacean population to die within a short period of time.
If the dead lumpfish is not discovered in time, it is imperative to perform a very generous water change and additionally filter with charcoal to filter out the released toxins

External links

  1. Sea Slug Forum (en). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.
  2. Sea Slugs of Hawaii (en). Abgerufen am 21.09.2023.
  3. sealifebase (en). Abgerufen am 06.12.2023.
  4. Wikipedia (de). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.
  5. Wild Singapore Homepage (en). Abgerufen am 07.08.2020.

Pictures

Commonly


Husbandry know-how of owners

0 husbandary tips from our users available
Show all and discuss