In One Ear: By-the-wind sailors
Published 12:15 am Thursday, March 14, 2024
- Ear: Velella
“We’ve been seeing a lot of velella velellas on the beach,” the Seaside Aquarium posted on Facebook. “Both fresh and dried.”
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“While walking along the beach, you may have noticed slimy, iridescent blue discs. These discs are a type of animal called velella velella, commonly known as purple sails or by-the-wind sailors … (which) have a clear ‘sail’ that catches the wind and pushes them across the ocean’s surface.
“When the wind blows from the west, these little guys get stranded on the beach. Once washed ashore, they either become food for a variety of beach-dwelling creatures or dry into the translucent ‘sails’ you see on the beach.
“Purple sails … capture their food with small sticky tentacles (and) feed on fish eggs and small planktonic copepods. Found in most oceans, purple sails are frequent visitors to the Oregon Coast. They can reach a size of 4 inches in length and 3 inches in width.”
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As one beachgoer noted: “Slippery and stinky.” (Photo: Seaside Aquarium)