Prostheceraeus roseus
seen from China
seen from Brunei

seen from Singapore

seen from Australia
seen from Philippines

seen from France

seen from Türkiye

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Singapore

seen from Philippines

seen from United Kingdom
seen from Philippines
seen from France
seen from Netherlands

seen from Germany
seen from South Korea
seen from Russia
seen from Taiwan
seen from United States
seen from United States
Prostheceraeus roseus
#1377 - Maritigrella fuscopunctatus - Dusky Spotted Flatworm
AKA Eurylepta fuscopunctatus, and Pseudoceros fuscopunctatus. Another discovery by Andrea Watts at the Omeo Wreck here in Perth.
Initially I thought it was a nudibranch, going by the vivid colours, but I was quite wrong - it’s actually a Euryleptid flatworm.
Euryletids are free-swimming, active carnivores and scavengers, and feed by enveloping encrusting sponges and ascidians and pushing their stomach out through the mouth, which is also their anus.
They generally glide over the sea bottom but are also capable of swimming short distances by undulating their sides. Common in shallow waters from Perth to Geographe Bay, but the colours and pattern can be surprisingly variable. The middle of the body may anything from orange to orange-brown to cream spots in a broad to narrow honeycomb pattern, or a single row of orange dots. Around the edges it can have large purple black (or sometimes creamy brown) spots (or blotches or sometimes as transverse lines) extending from the medial area in rows.
Found in Key Largo on Nov 16, 2013 in about 78F, less than 3' deep.
Maritigrella crozieri on mangrove tunicates. Key Largo March 15, 2015
IMG_4690pl by Ana Lama
Marine flatworm Prostheceraeus giesbrechtii. Mataró, Barcelona, Spain.