

".a member of the Australoplana alba complex. Other comments from him include the following.

ID thanks to Dr Leigh Winsor from James Cook University, Queensland. Apparently this is where some of the eyes are !!!? The very orange head end was much thinner and had a tiny mouth (surounded by mud in pic 3) Habitat:įound under a large rock in a dry sclerophyll eucalyptus forest. The pale rear end was very much thickened and had a constriction just short of the tip. By the time I left it was still only partially extended but made about 90mm length. After a short while it began to extend itself to start moving and it just got longer and longer. This flatworm was initially in resting mode coiled into a roughly circular shape about 25mm across - probably after a good meal judging by the bulge partway along the body.
