Seashells from Saba Island, Caribbean Netherlands
I am thrilled to see here on iNaturalist that Terence Zahner @zahnerphoto has recently been adding his gorgeous underwater images of marine life around the small Dutch Caribbean island of Saba, during SCUBA diving in March 2011, August 2013, and both March & August 2014
For that area of the Western Atlantic, the Lesser Antilles, I have visited and written papers about the marine mollusk faunas of the following islands: Montserrat, Nevis, St. Kitts, and also St. Eustatius (which is part of the Caribbean Netherlands, as Saba is), but I have not actually visited Saba, although I have written two papers about it.
In Britain and the US, these islands are considered part of the Leeward Island chain, although the Dutch consider them to be part of what they call the Windward Islands. Probably it is clearer to say these islands are part of the Eastern Caribbean.
I am especially happy to see that Terence uploaded images of a number of Saba sea slugs. Until 2013, the marine mollusk fauna of Saba had hardly been recorded at all in the scientific literature. And this is why, a few years ago, I started asking a few people who lived on or visited Saba to search for and photograph marine mollusks for me. I compiled as much info as I could, and wrote two papers on the subject, one in 2013 and one in 2017:
2013, Hewitt, Susan J., Marine mollusks from the island of Saba, Leeward Islands, West Indies, The Festivus XLV (8) 67–73
2017, Hewitt, Susan J., Additions to the marine mollusk checklist for the island of Saba, Leeward Islands, West Indies, Vita Malacologica Vol 16, 40 - 43
Terence, as well as photographing the Caribbean Reef Squid, the Queen Conch, the Flamingo Tongue Snail and the Lettuce Sea Slug, all of which have previously been recorded from the island, has photographed quite a few species which would be additions to the published marine mollusk faunal list for Saba. Here are some of them:
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*Cyphoma signatum now known to be just a form of C. gibbosum
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20018533
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Micromelo undatus
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/19994368 -
Felimare acriba
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/19994366 -
Felimare ruthi
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20021418
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20032382 -
Flabellina engeli
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20023589
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20023588 -
Flabellina hamanni
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20023468 -
?Doriprismatica sedna -- small juvenile
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20021414
Doriprismatica sedna -- adults
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/19783756
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/19808623 -
Facelinidae
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20020802 -
Scyllaea pelagica
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20032361
*Felimeda binza
https://www.inaturalist.org/observations/20032356
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It would be great to include all these additional species in a new short paper updating the marine mollusk faunal list of Saba -- and I am prepared to write it, if I can work out which scientific publication might be prepared to publish it. A short paper like this would have been perfect for the old journal "The Festivus", but the new, more magazine-like "Festivus" has a lot of problems -- it appears that the peer review process for that publication is seriously broken.
I would prefer to publish this info as a short paper in a peer-reviewed journal, but if I can't find the right outlet for it, I could I suppose publish it in "Spirula" a non-peer-reviewed publication of the Dutch Malacological Society. On problem is that the paper would require three color plates, which are expensive for a publication.