Trapania safracorniaFahey, 2004There are two nudis in this picture - the smaller, second one is just to the right of the first. You can see its tail and gills poking out.
Summary[edit] Description: Trapania armilla, a nudibranch from the family Goniodorididae. Date: 2 July 2009, 07:54. Source: Trapania armilla Uploaded by JoJan. Author: Steve Childs from Lancaster, UK.
Summary[edit] Description: Trapania armilla, a nudibranch from the family Goniodorididae. Date: 2 July 2009, 07:52. Source: Trapania armilla Uploaded by JoJan. Author: Steve Childs from Lancaster, UK.
Summary[edit] Description: Trapania armilla a nudibranch from the family Goniodorididae. Date: 2 July 2009, 07:55. Source: Trapania armilla Uploaded by JoJan. Author: Steve Childs from Lancaster, UK.
Christian Gloor (mostly) underwater photographer|sourceurl=https://flickr.com/photos/76738608@N08/30131383380%7Creviewdate=2018-10-17 11:17:35|reviewlicense=cc-by-2.0|reviewer=FlickreviewR 2
Wikimedia Commons
Summary[edit] Description: An unsuspecting eye might mistake these two Trapania sp. nudibranchs for a mother and its calf. Think again and look closer. The tiny transparent appendage linking them is the sexual organ of the small one. At this stage, they were done with their "business" and were starting to separate. To get an idea of the size, the big one must have been around 5-6mm. Date: 13 October 2016, 09:05. Source: Underwater cows. Author: Christian Gloor from Wakatobi Dive Resort, Indonesia. Camera location1° 29′ 27.18″ N, 125° 15′ 28.19″ EView all coordinates using: OpenStreetMap 1.490882; 125.257830.
Summary[edit] Description: Nora Khalaf's Nudibranch (Trapania norakhalafae Khalaf, 2017) from the Dibba Sea, East Coast of the United Arab Emirates, Gulf of Oman. Date: 2 September 2017. Source: Nora Khalaf's Nudibranch (Trapania norakhalafae Khalaf, 2017). Author: Ola Khalaf.