Cuthona poritophages
Rudman, 1979

Order: NUDIBRANCHIA
Suborder: AEOLIDINA
Family: Tergipedidae

DISTRIBUTION

Known only from East Africa.

PHOTO

Cuthona poritophages on Porites colony, 10mm long. Photo at LOWER RIGHT shows two animals with their egg masses, which are laid over the living coral colony. Africana Bch, 1km south of Kunduchi Bch, Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, June 1977. PHOTOS: Bill Rudman.

RELATED TOPIC

Coral-feeding

This small tergipedid grows to about 11mm. It has only been found on colonies of the coral Porites, on which it lives, feeds and lays its eggs. As most species of Cuthona live and feed on hydroid colonies, this species shows some interesting adaptions to its unique choice of food. Its radular teeth are about half the size of a similar-sized hydroid-feeding Cuthona enabling it to scrape the polyp tissue from each calyx of the coral skeleton. The cnidosac at the tip of each ceras is reduced and non-functional, (Porites nematocysts apparently being worthless for defence), but the epithelial wall at the tip of each ceras is packed with large osmiophil secretory cells apparently for defence.

Cuthona poritophages greatest adaptation is its very rapid life cycle. Adults are sexually mature within 3 weeks of hatching (5-7mm long). The egg masses contain up to 40 eggs which hatch in 5-7 days. Most veligers swim for about 10 minutes then settle on to part of the coral colony where within 30 minutes they have absorbed their velar lobes and within an hour have dropped their shell and metamorphosed into a tiny "slug". A few veligers can remain swimming for at least 4 days. Such variability will enable most larvae to settle on local colonies of Porites, but it also leaves a few larvae the useful ability to travel further afield. In one aquarium study I did in Tanzania, in a 6 week period, 6 animals produced about 120 offspring (in 2 bursts of egglaying). The combined efforts of the original six and their off-spring, resulted in the production of 720 egg masses (approx. 29,000 eggs)!

See other coral-feeding species: Phestilla lugubris, Phestilla minor

References.
• Rudman, W.B. (1979) The ecology and anatomy of a new species of aeolid opisthobranch mollusc: a predator of the reef-forming coral Porites. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 65: 339-359.
• Rudman, W.B. (1981) Further studies on the anatomy and ecology of opisthobranch molluscs feeding on the scleractinian coral Porites. Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society, 71: 373-412.

Authorship details
Rudman, W.B., 1999 (July 1) Cuthona poritophages Rudman, 1979. [In] Sea Slug Forum. Australian Museum, Sydney. Available from http://www.seaslugforum.net/factsheet/cuthpori

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