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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
A colony on a surface blade of kelp. Each individual is extending its feeding tentacles, lophophore. They are spawning fertilized eggs. Each individual compartment is 1mm long.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
This young colony on a blade of kelp is 4mm across. It grows by budding.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
These two young colonies are budding and may soon encrust most of the blade of kelp.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
Twin-shelled larvae, ancestrulae, of the bryozoan Membranipora, recently settled from the plankton.Size 1 mm., 1-2 days old. They already have extended their feeding tentacles. They will grow by budding.
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
These zooids are ripe with eggs. The color is derived from the carotenoid pigments of ingested diatoms. Each zooid is 1mm long
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2005 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
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2006 California Academy of Sciences
CalPhotos
This orange-brown encrusting bryozoan was on the wharf piling at about 5 m depth. The feeding lophophores are extended on some of the .5mm long zooids.
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Conopeum seurati colony.
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Clump of Flustra foliacea
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All Biocode files are based on field identifications to the best of the researcher’s ability at the time.