The Present Minds
By Shaniya Naz March 6, 2026 Current

Rainbow sea slug: the most beautiful warning sign in british waters

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Shaniya Naz
Written By Shaniya Naz Co-Founder · Visual Designer

Shaniya Naz writes about people, places, and the shifting rhythms of everyday life. Her work is guided by curiosity and a quiet interest in…

Rainbow sea slug is one of the most visually extraordinary creatures living in British waters, and almost nobody knows it exists.

It is 3 centimetres long. Its body is translucent white, covered in vivid orange and yellow spots, fringed with feathery plumes that catch light like something made of stained glass. Its scientific name is Babakina anadoni. It belongs to a group of marine animals called nudibranchs, a word derived from Latin meaning naked gills, because their breathing organs are worn on the outside of the body, exposed and elaborate, like decorations.

It looks as though someone designed it for a coral reef in the Maldives.

It was found in a rock pool in Devon. And that is where the story gets serious.

Found by a schoolgirl on a family day out

The first recorded sighting of the rainbow sea slug in Devon was made in 2024 by Felix Lever, a school student, on a family rockpooling trip to Wembury Beach near Plymouth.

She lifted a rock and found something bright and unusual underneath. She placed it carefully in a viewing pot, photographed it, and posted it to her Instagram account. Her grandfather, Dr Paul Naylor, a local marine biologist and underwater photographer, identified it immediately.

Before that Devon sighting, only a handful ofrainbow sea slugs had ever been recorded in the entire UK. The first was off the Isles of Scilly in 2022. A volunteer with the Rock Pool Project found one on the south coast of Cornwall in 2023, describing how she had a hunch something interesting was hiding under a particular rock and lifted it to find the animal unfurling itself in full technicolour. Devon followed in 2024.

Three sightings in three years, in three different locations, each one further east and further north than the last.

The direction of travel is the signal.

rainbow sea slug

Where It Is Supposed to Live

The rainbow sea slug’s natural range is the warmer waters of the Mediterranean and the Atlantic coasts of Spain, Portugal and France. It is not a British species. It has no evolutionary history in these waters. Its prey species, the sea anemones it hunts and feeds on, are here. But the water temperature that allows it to survive and reproduce was not, historically, something Britain’s seas could reliably offer.

UK sea surface temperatures have been experiencing a significant warming trend of 0.3 degrees Celsius every decade for the last 40 years, according to the National Oceanography Centre. That is a number that sounds modest. In terms of marine ecosystem impact it is enormous. Marine species are extraordinarily sensitive to temperature. A shift of one degree changes which species can survive where. A shift of three degrees, accumulated over a century, restructures entire communities of life.

The rainbow sea slug is not adapting to British waters. British waters are adapting to it. The sea is becoming somewhere the slug can survive. The slug is simply following the warmth northward, as its biology has always instructed it to do.

Coral Smith, Devon Wildlife Trust’s Marine Awareness Officer, said it plainly. The discovery is a strong indicator that the seas are warming due to climate change. Because it can now survive here means that other creatures adapted to colder water will be struggling.

That sentence deserves to sit with you for a moment.

rainbow sea slug
Graph showing the effect of Global Temperatures Rising.

Beauty as a Warning System

The nudibranchs are the most visually spectacular group of animals in British waters. Most people have never seen one because most people do not look.

There are over 3,000 species of nudibranch globally. Roughly 100 species have been recorded in UK waters. They range from a few millimetres to several centimetres in length. They come in electric blue, crimson, gold, violet, and combinations that have no names because colour language was not developed with nudibranchs in mind. They are the birds of paradise of the sea floor, noticed only by the people who go looking.

In September 2025, Cornwall Wildlife Trust volunteers discovered another warm-water nudibranch appearing in UK waters for the first time. Spurilla neapolitana, known as the hair curler slug for the thick, curling outgrowths on its body, was found at Prisk Cove on the Helford. Its previous most northerly sighting had been in Brest, France, just weeks earlier. It is normally resident in the Caribbean, the Mediterranean, and the western Atlantic.

Brest to Cornwall in a matter of weeks. On the current trajectory, volunteers are now asking not if the next warm-water species will arrive, but which one and when.

sea slug Devon Cornwall

What Citizen Science Is Telling Us

The rainbow sea slug was not found by a research institution or a government monitoring programme. It was found by a child on a day out, by a volunteer on a survey walk, by people who simply go to the coast and pay attention.

The Wildlife Trusts run a national intertidal survey programme called Shoresearch. Volunteers in Devon alone logged over 700 hours of surveys in 2024. Across the UK, those volunteers collectively clocked over 46,000 hours. They are recording climate change indicator species, invasive non-native species, and native species that are shifting their range.

The data they are gathering is not available any other way. The coastline is too long, the rock pools too numerous, the species too small and too easily overlooked for institutional science to cover alone. The picture being assembled of what is happening to British marine life is being built, rock pool by rock pool, by people who do it because they love the coast.

Matt Slater, marine conservation officer at Cornwall Wildlife Trust, described the hair curler slug discovery as highlighting the importance of citizen science. The rates of change in British seas, he said, are accelerating dramatically.

The 2025 marine review from the Wildlife Trusts documented a 1,500 percent increase in Mediterranean octopus sightings along the South Coast compared to 2023, an octopus bloom of a scale not seen in the UK for 75 years. Mauve jellyfish, normally found in the Mediterranean, washed up in hundreds on the shores of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly. A loggerhead sea turtle was found in Cumbria. Humpback whales were sighted off Lancashire and North Wales.

These are not isolated curiosities. They are a pattern.

rainbow sea slug

The Cold Water Species Nobody Mentions

Every warm-water species arriving in British seas is displacing something.

The creatures that evolved for the colder, cleaner, more stable conditions of historic British coastal waters are under pressure. Cold water fish species are declining. Native oysters, already devastated by overfishing and disease, face competition from invasive Pacific oysters that thrive in warming conditions. Pom-pom weed, an Asian seaweed that forms dense red tangles, was found across Devon in 2024 and could displace the barnacles and macro-invertebrates that native species depend on.

The rainbow sea slug is beautiful. Its arrival is genuinely exciting for the volunteer who lifts a rock and finds it there. And its presence in Devon waters is a direct consequence of conditions that are simultaneously making life harder for species that have been part of this ecosystem for thousands of years.

This is what the Devon Wildlife Trust meant by the complexity of understanding and communicating climate change in the marine environment. The story is not simply loss. It is not simply gain. It is a reshuffling of life at a speed that natural systems were not built to accommodate.

marine wildlife UK 2024

What the Rock Pools Are Saying

There is a particular quality of attention that rock pooling requires. You have to slow down, get low, be patient, let your eyes adjust to what you are looking for. The pools do not give up their inhabitants to a glance. You have to stay long enough for the stillness to become interesting.

The people who do this regularly are watching the British coast change in real time. Not through data sets or satellite images but through the specific, personal experience of a species being there one year that was not there before.

A 3-centimetre nudibranch, vivid with colour, found under a rock by a schoolgirl on a family day out.

It is a small thing. It is also, if you know what it means, one of the clearest signals available about the state of the sea.

The rainbow sea slug did not travel to Devon to deliver a warning. It came because the water was warm enough. The warning is ours to read, or not, as we choose.

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Shaniya Naz
Written By

Shaniya Naz

Co-Founder · Visual Designer

Shaniya Naz writes about people, places, and the shifting rhythms of everyday life. Her work is guided by curiosity and a quiet interest in how experiences shape perspective.

Key Takeaways
  • The rainbow sea slug, Babakina anadoni, has recently been spotted in British waters, marking a northward shift from its traditional warmer habitats due to rising sea temperatures.
  • Citizen science plays a crucial role in tracking marine biodiversity changes, with volunteers and casual observers documenting new species arrivals and shifts in marine ecosystems.
  • Warming seas are enabling warm-water species to colonize British coasts, but this shift threatens native cold-water species and disrupts long-established marine communities.
  • The appearance of visually striking nudibranchs like the rainbow sea slug serves as a vivid indicator of climate change impacts on marine life.
  • The changes in species distribution reflect a complex ecological reshuffling rather than simple loss or gain, highlighting the rapid pace of environmental change in marine habitats.
Glossary
Rainbow sea slug (Babakina anadoni)
A small, vividly colored nudibranch recently found in British waters, originally native to warmer Mediterranean and Atlantic coasts.
Nudibranchs
A group of marine animals known for their exposed gills and bright colors, with over 3,000 species worldwide and about 100 recorded in UK waters.
Citizen science
Scientific data collection and observation conducted by volunteers and non-professionals, crucial for monitoring marine biodiversity changes along extensive coastlines.
Marine species range shift
The movement of marine species to new geographic areas in response to changing environmental conditions, such as rising sea temperatures.
Climate change indicator species
Species whose presence, absence, or abundance provides evidence of environmental changes linked to climate change, such as the arrival of warm-water nudibranchs.
Rock pooling
The activity of exploring tidal pools to observe marine life, requiring patience and attention to detail to detect small or camouflaged species.
FAQ
Why is the rainbow sea slug appearing in British waters now?
The rainbow sea slug is appearing in British waters due to rising sea surface temperatures, which have warmed enough to support its survival and reproduction outside its traditional warmer range.
What role does citizen science play in monitoring marine changes?
Citizen science enables widespread data collection by volunteers who observe and record marine species, filling gaps that institutional science cannot cover due to the vastness and complexity of coastal environments.
How does the arrival of warm-water species affect native marine life?
Warm-water species can displace native cold-water species by competing for resources and altering habitats, contributing to declines in native populations and changing ecosystem dynamics.
What makes nudibranchs important indicators of climate change?
Nudibranchs are sensitive to temperature changes and have distinct, vivid appearances, making their presence or absence a clear and visually striking signal of shifts in marine environmental conditions.
Is the appearance of new species in British waters purely negative?
No, the arrival of new species reflects a complex reshuffling of marine life due to climate change, involving both losses and gains, and highlights the rapid pace of ecological change rather than a simple decline.
Editorial Note

This piece is part of The Present Minds, essays on psychology, identity, and modern life.

Discussion
The Present MindsMar 8, 2026
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