Wine Glass Hydroid (Obelia, polyp form)
![RkMyQTJGNDAxRDg2Nzg5MDFBQ0Q6MTEyMzBmNGQ0ZTg2ZmMxYzViODZlOGJhMmJlZTdjMmE6Ojo6OjA=.jpg](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5b15e78cb98a78508a4e7bc6/1528401528791-K9KXNYQYFD9JZJQLJ7BU/RkMyQTJGNDAxRDg2Nzg5MDFBQ0Q6MTEyMzBmNGQ0ZTg2ZmMxYzViODZlOGJhMmJlZTdjMmE6Ojo6OjA%3D.jpg)
![RkMyQTJGNDAxRDg2Nzg5MDFBQ0Q6MWQyYTE4ZDc0Yzk0YmU0M2UwNmZkMGVkOWJlNDhlZDg6Ojo6OjA=.jpeg](https://images.squarespace-cdn.com/content/v1/5b15e78cb98a78508a4e7bc6/1529300265525-1YD6P0ET6CLT1FOVXL2T/RkMyQTJGNDAxRDg2Nzg5MDFBQ0Q6MWQyYTE4ZDc0Yzk0YmU0M2UwNmZkMGVkOWJlNDhlZDg6Ojo6OjA%3D.jpeg)
Wine Glass Hydroid (Obelia, polyp form)
Common name: wine-glass hydroid, obelia, sea fur
Scientific name: Obelia ssp.
Locations: tidepools, mooring floats, kelp fronds
Seasonality: spring - late fall
Colors: white
Size: 3” - 6" samples
Collected: by hand
Quantity: sold by the clump or cluster on rocks, shells, pieces of kelp
Tidepool Tim says, “These hydroids grow quickly can cover everything in a tidepool by summers end - rocks, seaweeds, shells, snails, crabs, etc. They are easiest to collect on kelp plants and mooring lines. We like to watch bushy-backed nudibrancs eat them as they graze across the surface of the kelp plants.”