Dotted Nudibranch (Jorunna fenebris)
Observed: Koh Chang, December 2015
Observed By: BB Divers
The dotted nudibranch is a white-bodied species of nudibranch with distinctive black rings filled with black and white spots.
Observed: Koh Chang, December 2015
Observed By: BB Divers
The dotted nudibranch is a white-bodied species of nudibranch with distinctive black rings filled with black and white spots.
Observed: Koh Chang, December 2015
Observed By: BB Divers
This strange mollusc is a type of nudibranch that has a bright yellow body that is covered with lumpy white tubercules. It can measure up to 6cm in length, which is probably quite enough. At that length it is cute and colourful – but you probably wouldn’t think that if it was six metres long would you?
Observed: Koh Chang Reefs, December 2015
Observed By: Jonathan Milnes
The Pharoah Cuttlefish is a large species of cuttlefish that grows up to 42cm in length and 5kg in weight. It is of course a mollusc and not a fish – it has no bone instead having a skeleton made out of a shell known as the cuttlebone.
Cuttlefish are all round marvellous animals- here are a few reasons why:
– For a start they are one of the most intelligent invertebrate species with a level of intelligence that has been compared to that of a dog.
– Also like their close relatives the squid they fire out clouds of ink to help them to escape from predators.
– Then there are their eyes, which work in a completely different way to those of vertebrates. So different in fact that these two different eye types are considered to be examples of convergent
evolution, the separate development of biological organs that perform the same role.
– And there is their skin colour and texture-changing abilities. They can rapidly change their skin colour at will using special skin cells called chromatophores, iridphores and leucophores (read the Wikipedia page it’s fascinating). They use this to camouflage themselves when hunting prey but also in wild technicolour mating and territorial displays that are, frankly, amazing.
– Oh, and they have beaks. And they swim backwards. And their blood is green and they have three hearts. And they are colourblind. And they taste food with their suckers.
Observed: Koh Chang, December 2015
Observed By: สุธนัย ครุพานิช
The colour sergeant is a species of brush-footed butterfly with black wings that have a white and an orange stripe. You can’t see that here though since we only have observations of the weid and worderful juvenile caterpillar form.
As you can see this is a many-horned and spiky little creature that exudes all kinds of tendrils and feelers.
Observed: Koh Chang Reefs, December 2015
Observed By: BB Divers
The yellow boxfish is a species of boxfish that is coloured yellow. With us so far? When young they are apparently a bright and vivid yellow colour but this colour fades with age and older fish will have a blue-grey and faded yellow colour. Poor old things.
They are solitary animals but breed in spring in groups of one male and between two and four females, a thought that probably keeps them going through those dark winter months.
They are such agile swimmers that in 2006 Mercedes Benz produced a concept car based on their shape. They must have been somewhat displeased when it was later discovered that their swimming agility is more to do with the combination of fin movements with their un-aerodynamic body shape. back to the drawing board then.
Observed: Koh Chang Reefs, December 2015
Observed By: BB Divers
The yellowback fusilier is a small fish with a pale body and a distinctive bright yellow zone on its back. They swarm in large numbers and are a common sight around Koh Chang reefs and lagoons and all over the Indian and Western Pacific Oceans.
They feed on zooplankton and are therefore planktivores, not quite vegetarians, but close.
Observed: Koh Chang Reefs, October 2015
Observed By: Jonathan Milnes
And what a white eye this moray eel has. It has one of the most impressive stares in the ocean.
The white-eyed moray is a widespread tropical species of eel that is common throughoutthe Indo-Pacific region. They live amongst rocks and in coral reefs and are also common residents of shipwrecks. They grow to a maximum length of 65cm.
White-eyed Moray Eel daveharasti.com
Observed: Koh Chang Reefs,
Observed By: BB Divers
The spiny dogfish is a member of the squalidae or dogfish family of sharks. It is found in many parts of the world usually in shallow waters.
The male shark doesn’t mature until around 11 years of age butthe female is not mature until around 18-21 years of age. They grow to a maximum length of 99 – 159cm and are thought to live for up to 100 years. Their young gestate for between 18 and 24 months which is thought to be the longest of any known animal.
The spiny dogfish used to be the most abundant species of shark in the world but overfishing has led to dramatic decreases in numbers.
Observed: Koh Chang Reefs,
Observed By: BB Divers
The scribbled filefish is a marine fish belonging to the family Monacanthidae. It can grow up to 110cm in length and has a distinctive elongated snout and a small sharp-toothed mouth. It has a blue, brown and black patterned marking but the iridescent blue lines are the most eye catching.
Observed: Koh Chang Reefs,
Observed By: Jonathan Milnes
The Longfin batfish is one of the larger reef-dwelling fishes to be found in Koh Chang waters, growing up to 60cm in length.