A sea slug deadly to dogs and humans, particularly young children, found at Tauranga Bridge Marina has sparked a warning from a local marine expert.
Professor Chris Battershill, the director of the Coastal Marine Field Centre in Tauranga, said due to warmer weather these toxic slugs can sometimes lose their grip from rocks in shallow tidal areas and end up being washed on to the shoreline.
"One of the toxic Grey side-gilled Pleurobranchaea maculata sea slugs which looks like a little grey mouse, but with a sting in its tail, was found at the Bridge Marina last week," he said.
Battershill said the slugs were deadly because their skin contained the toxin Tetrodotoxin (TTX) which was the same toxin as the puffer fish.
"There have been cases where dogs had died after licking them or swallowing them and they can also be deadly to humans, especially young children," he said.