Nice work...had guessed it was a Dendrodoris but could not find an image on Nudipixel that matched.
Odd, not only has it never been reported in the northern gulf, but:
1. It seems to be fairly rare.
2. All these here look the same (I've seen 5 so far)..which makes sense they all came from the same area... but I wonder where that area actually is - clearly not where divers go.
3. Color is fairly different from the few images I could find, and all had the eye stalks pulled in...deep water animal? Not used to light?
Thanks for the great detective work.
Odd, not only has it never been reported in the northern gulf, but:
1. It seems to be fairly rare.
2. All these here look the same (I've seen 5 so far)..which makes sense they all came from the same area... but I wonder where that area actually is - clearly not where divers go.
3. Color is fairly different from the few images I could find, and all had the eye stalks pulled in...deep water animal? Not used to light?
Thanks for the great detective work.
Took me a bit to locate ID, but looks like the nudi is Dendrodoris warta. Only known from south-eastern USA, and seems to be uncommon. Have a look at the info found on The Sea Slug forum if you like. Since there are currently no photos of this species on Nudipixel it might be worth submitting a photo there for people to reference in the future.
As to how they got there, not sure but I might venture a guess. Some nudis are capable of laying thousands or millions of eggs at a time, which hatch into floating or swimming larvae. Once they find a home, the larvae probably develop fairly quickly. It would not be difficult to imagine a large population appearing quickly if conditions are in their favor.
Nice find!