Ghost nudibranch, Coleman's melibe, Ghost melibe

Melibe colemani Gosliner & Pola, 2012

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Taxonomy & Classification
OrderNudibranchia (Nudibranchs)
SuborderDendronotina
FamilyTethydida
GenusMelibe
WoRMS AphiaID708806
iNaturalist557665
Dive SitesCanyon 1, Paluksuhan, Santa Maria
Formally described by Gosliner & Pola in 2012. Named after Neville Coleman (1938–2012) who first discovered the species in 2008 at Mabul Island, Malaysia — one month before the formal description was published. Phylogenetically placed within the same Melibe clade as M. engeli, M. digitata, and M. tuberculata. Synonym: none currently accepted.
Morphology
Size25–60 mm
Colour VariationsBody almost entirely transparent/translucent with no colour morphs recorded. Internal digestive glands visible as a network of cream-white to whitish-brown tubules ramifying throughout the body and cerata — giving the iconic "string bag" or "pile of strings" appearance under direct light.
Identifying FeaturesFully translucent gelatinous body with internal organs visible to the naked eye. Laterally flattened cerata with elongate apical papillae — key distinction from M. bucephala and M. engeli which have cylindrical cerata. Rhinophoral sheaths cylindrical with a single papilla at apex, vs. sail-shaped sheaths with numerous papillae in related species. Net-shaped oral hood used as feeding trap. Anterior and posterior ends appear almost identical at first glance.
The oral hood is relatively small compared to other Melibe species, bearing a single row of thin papillae ventrally and larger papillae dorsally. Rhinophores well-separated, sited on the posterior of the hood, each comprising 3–4 lateral lamellae on a long thin cylindrical sheath. Body length typically 25–60mm. Often mistaken for decomposing tissue, debris, or a piece of hydroid colony.
Habitat & Ecology
Substratecoral, rubble, muck
Reef Zoneslope, flat
Depth Range 5–25 m (most common: 10 m)
Temperature27–29°C
Currentnone
Visibilityvariable
Primary Prey / HostXenia coral (genus Xenia) — soft coral rubble. Also recorded feeding on small crustaceans, shelled caenogastropods, worms and benthic microfauna trapped via oral hood sweep.
Activity & Behaviour
Active Timeday, night
Tidal Correlationnone
Seasonal PresenceYear-round at Romblon — SSC field data to be added
Social Behavioursolitary
Feeding Methodhunting
Feeding Timeopportunistic
Egg RibbonSSC field observation to be added
Spawning SeasonSSC field observation to be added
Chemical DefenceAbsent
Aposematic ColouringAbsent
Camouflage StrategyFull body transparency allows blending with surroundings. Digestive tubule network mimics detritus, hydroids, sponges or algae on seafloor. Cryptobenthic — often indistinguishable from debris at first glance.
Escape ResponseUndulating swimming motion when disturbed — lifts off substrate and drifts slowly. Slow floating movement in low current. Rarely moves quickly.
Scientific Literature
  • Diversification of filter-feeding nudibranchs: two remarkable new species of Melibe (Opisthobranchia: Tethyiidae) from the tropical western Pacific
  • Systematic review and phylogenetic analysis of the nudibranch genus Melibe (Opisthobranchia: Dendronotacea) with descriptions of three new species
  • Malacologische Untersuchungen — Description of Melibe colemani
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