Perhaps a sand lance?
Light trap as part of a UAF study
Light trap per UAF study. ~1cm long
@kljinsitka check this out!
@clauden what do you think? Unfortunately I only got one view.
Found by @annanw
The first one on iNat? 70 feet.
Amundsen 2023, leg 3, Station site 1.2 with Tucker trawl (oblique tow 500 um) depth of 100 m
Larvae, 100um plankton net, 10-50x magnification
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
Observed on the Northeast Pacific Deep-sea Expedition in May to June 2023. Look below for a link to the observation video, and check out the expedition website for more info at https://www.oceannetworks.ca/expeditions/northeast-pacific-deep-sea-expedition/
Observed on the Northeast Pacific Deep-sea Expedition in May to June 2023. Look below for a link to the observation video, and check out the expedition website for more info at https://www.oceannetworks.ca/expeditions/northeast-pacific-deep-sea-expedition/
Habitat hypersaline lake.
Image 1 - Male, dorsal view.
Image 2 - Female, dorsal view.
Image 3 - Male head, frontal view, showing the distal segments of the second antennae to be i) flat, ii) broadly triangular, iii) with pointed apices directed medially.
Image 4 - Habitat.
The major solution salt in this lake is sodium carbonate (Cummings, J.M. 1940. Saline and Hydromagnesite Deposits of British Columbia, Bulletin No. 4. BC Dept of Mines: 160pp)
the nudibranch at bottom right
Found in a pot at the far right end of Big Bay
Above muskeg puddle in brush.
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
ArcticNet 2009, leg 2, Station 345, v-tow 200 um, depth : 510 - 0 m
Amundsen 2023, leg 3, CB-05 with Beam Trawl, depth of 180 m
ArcticNet 2014, leg 2, Station 421, v-tow 200 um, depth : 980 - 0 m
ArcticNet 2014, leg 2, Station 434, v-tow 200 um, depth : 35 - 0 m
This observation is part of a long-term project examining plankton biodiversity in the nearshore waters around the Hakai Institute's Quadra Island ecological observatory. A COI DNA sequence from the organism has been deposited in the Barcode of Life Data System (BOLD). Photo license and credit belong to the Hakai Institute.
fluorescent microscopy, stained with Congo Red
Capture with a 200um net.
Commensal worm on abalone.
caught at approx. 70-100 fathoms
Will correct location when I know it. Unusually large specimen approx. 400 microns across. Due to the unusually inflated test, it may instead be an undescribed species. [edit: was actually a known species I hadn't previously encountered].
21 m depth.
Reddish barrel sponges in foreground. Adjacent greenish patches are colonies of the coral Porites panamensis.
Karen L. Johnson (kljinsitka) collected the sediment sample from ~ 21m depth and sent it to me. I found this specimen. See also www.foraminifera.eu/single.php?no=1021517&aktion=suche
The ID is based upon TODD, R. & D. LOW - Recent foraminifera from the Gulf of Alaska and southeastern Alaska. 1967. United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper 573-A.
Karen L. Johnson (kljinsitka) collected the sediment sample from ~ 21m depth and sent it to me. I found this specimen. See also www.foraminifera.eu/single.php?no=1021525&aktion=suche
Karen L. Johnson (kljinsitka) collected the sediment sample from ~ 21m depth and sent it to me. I found this specimen. See also www.foraminifera.eu/single.php?no=1021506&aktion=suche
The ID is based upon TODD, R. & D. LOW - Recent foraminifera from the Gulf of Alaska and southeastern Alaska. 1967. United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper 573-A.
Karen L. Johnson (kljinsitka) collected the sediment sample from ~ 21m depth and sent it to me. I found this specimen. See also www.foraminifera.eu/single.php?no=1021503&aktion=suche
The ID is based upon TODD, R. & D. LOW - Recent foraminifera from the Gulf of Alaska and southeastern Alaska. 1967. United States Geological Survey, Professional Paper 573-A.
Robertinoides charlottensis // in gbif
The ID is based upon CUSHMAN, J. A., 1925, Recent foraminifera from British Columbia: Cushman Laboratory for Foraminiferal Research, Contributions, v. 1, p. 38–47
Baseball-sized velutinid (vestigial shell is inside), observed on a DFO Quebec Region scallop survey. Collection IML no. 12905. Were a pair.
Freshwater pond.
Came off a rockfish as we were fileting it. No true rostrum. Proprodi of pereopods 1-3 with a large, broad spine edged with 3 coalesced spines. Meri of pereopods 1-3 with what I would call blunt spines. 16 mm total length.
Inside mouth of China rockfish
Copepod parasite seen on a Redfish (Sebastes sp.), during a DFO Quebec Region trawl survey with the CCGS Needler in summer of 2001 / Copépode parasite vu sur un sébaste (Sebastes sp.), lors d'un relevé de chalut du MPO région du Québec à bord du NGCC Needler durant l'été du 2001.