Jump to content

Annediver

Member
  • Content Count

    74
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Community Reputation

0 Neutral

About Annediver

  • Rank
    Lionfish

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Female
  • Location
    Delray Beach, Florida
  • Interests
    Opisthobranchs
  1. You can get "Caribbean Sea Slugs, A field guide to the opisthobranch mollusks from the tropical northwestern Atlantic" from Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Caribbean-Sea-Slugs-...7184&sr=1-1
  2. DivinDiva, Are you still photographing McGinty's Cyphoma on your NC wrecks? Thanks, AnneDiver
  3. The nudibranch is: Chromodoris binza, page 148 in Caribbean Sea Slugs (I had to get a plug in!) Anne
  4. This Triviid or Ovulid species was photographed in Riviera Beach, Florida by Deb Devers. Can anyone identify it please? Thanks Anne and Deb
  5. This Polyclad flatworm is "Maritigrella newmanae " Excellent photograph
  6. I have seen this app on IPhone and it is great. In fact it was used to identify an eel a friend photographed. Very user friendly and handy to use after a dive...Anne
  7. Thank you so much Leslie. The links are wonderful. And I should have known you would be working on a Saturday! Anne
  8. A friend, Robert Shearer, found this "bone?" Scuba diving the other day. It was found in the sand in 72' of water at Hog Heaven Reef off Boca Raton, FL, on 6/5/2010 It looked like bone to Robert. Can anyone help identify what it is and what it is from? Thank you Anne
  9. Hey Laz, Your eel is: Bascanichthys sp. (Whip eel) Great shot of it. Anne
  10. Thank you Don, I did go back the next day and took more photos, and I think it could be a pen shell. I am going to try to find it again and determine if it is alive or dead and get some more photos. Thanks, Anne
  11. Thanks Leslie, I'll see what I can find out.
  12. I was diving today in Lake Worth Lagoon, Riviera Beach, FL. I turned over a small rock and saw this small oval thing. Help Leslie, is this a bivalve or something else?. It was about the size of a penny, and in less than 5 feet of water.
  13. Leslie is right, it is a flatworm, possibly a Paraplanocera species Have a look in "Marine Flatworms, The World of Polyclads" byLeslie Newman and Lester Cannon
×
×
  • Create New...