Wreckreational Diving

 

4/9/2012 - Smaller Crowd At The Barge Today

Merry wanted to make a do-over dive on the Redondo Barge this afternoon. I remembered my macro lens this time. Patchy fog and wind chop at the surface gave way to fairly nice conditions under water. Eighteen feet vis and 51° water is very nice compared to what we've experienced lately.
I only found one tiny Tritonia festiva today, but when I looked under a small piece of rusty iron I hit the jackpot. I noticed a small dot in the center with rhinophores. It was the smallest Aeolidiella oliviae I have ever seen. Nearby was an even smaller flatworm. When I downloaded the photo I found not only my first Cuthona lagunae, but two of them. They were barely visible in the original photo.
During our ascent we worked on our jelly photographic skills. We did better, but still need improvement.


Cuthona lagunae bycatch


Flatworm


Aeolidiella oliviae


Tritonia festiva


Doriopsilla albopunctata


Aegires albopunctatus


Flabellina trilineata


Hermissenda crassicornis


Navanax inermis

RedondoBarge5.jpg
Painted greenling


I found Margaret's little sculpin hiding under a rock


Pleurobrachia bachei


Mitrocoma cellularia


Leuckartiara spp.

While going through my photos from Sunday I found another tiny nudibranch. Dr. Jeff Goddard identified it as Cuthona albocrusta. The larger Aeolidiella oliviae next to it was 1/16" long.





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