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  1. Elysia viridis, the sap-sucking slug, is a small-to-medium-sized species of green sea slug, a marine opisthobranch gastropod mollusc in the family Plakobranchidae. This sea slug resembles a nudibranch, but it is not closely related to that clade of gastropods. It is instead a sacoglossan.
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elysia_viridis
    Elysia viridis is very similar to the sea hare in its soft winged body and colouration, although Elysia sp. is flatter with no oral tentacles. Elysia viridis is known as a 'sap-sucking slug' and feeds only on a single or limited food source (stenophagous).
    www.marlin.ac.uk/species/detail/2130
    Elysia viridis are kleptoplasts taking chloroplasts from the algae they graze on and incorporating them into their own digestive glands cells. Once here the chloroplasts can continue to photosynthesize for months enabling the slugs to exploit contributions from both heterotrophy and phototrophy to support their fitness.
    www.seanature.co.uk/elysia_viridis.html
  2. Critical thermal maxima and oxygen uptake in Elysia viridis …

  3. Replication Data for: Critical thermal maxima and oxygen …

  4. description of Elysia viridis - Green elysia - European …

    WebApr 29, 2024 · Classification. Source : World Register of Marine Species Dernière mise à jour 01-02-2023 Animalia (Kingdom) Mollusca (Phylum) Gastropoda (Class) Heterobranchia (Subclass) Euthyneura (Infraclass)

  5. Elusive biodiversity: a journey through the less known but most ...

  6. Project kick-off; Lower Heterobranchia and Pyramidellidae of Norway

  7. Critical thermal maxima and oxygen uptake in Elysia viridis …

  8. 32. Pelomysfallax, Peters. ? . 15. Kambove.

  9. description de Elysia viridis - Elysie verte

    Web5 days ago · Elysia viridis est un mollusque sacoglosse qui mesure jusqu'à 5 cm de long. Il possède des parapodies larges au bord ondulé partant de l'arrière des rhinophores jusqu'à l'extrémité postérieure du pied. Lorsque …

  10. Grüne Samtschnecke – biologie-seite.de

  11. Foraminifera - The World Foraminifera Database - WoRMS