Sea slug

Grey sea slug

Devon Wildlife Trust

Sea slug

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Scientific name: Aeolidia filomenae
This large sea slug is anything but dull!

Top facts

Stats

Up to 12cm long

When to see

April to October

About

This large species of ‘nudibranch’ sea slug feeds on a wide variety of sea anemones! They can lay up to 400,000 eggs on the underside of rock in a beautiful ribbon-like formation.

What to look for

This large sea slug usually has grey, brown or fawn colouration. It is covered in lots of floppy projections unique to nudibranchs, known as ‘cerata’. It also has a white V-shaped mark on the front of its head. If you are recording your sightings as part of a recording scheme, make sure to include clear photographs to help verifiers confirm your sighting.

Where to find

Common around the British Isles and Ireland, as well as colder northern waters of Europe

Did you know?

Not only is this sea slug able to eat sea anemones without getting stung, but it can actually reproduce the anemone’s stinging cells into its own body for protection!