Rosalindidae are globally distributed. They have been reported in the Northeast and Northwest
Atlantic Ocean, the Central Eastern Atlantic off the African coast, the Northwestern
Pacific Ocean, the
Bass Strait off
Australia, the Western
Mediterranean Sea, and the
Gulf of Mexico. Between 2001-2005, many species of the family Rosalindidae were discovered off the
Southeastern U.S. coast, near the east coasts of
North Carolina and
Florida. Rosalindidae were spotted growing in deep-coral ecosystems in these oceanic areas, ranging from the deep-
neritic to
bathyal zones. One species,
Rosalinda incrustans, inhabited the northern Gulf of Mexico, but this same species was also found growing in the Northeastern Atlantic and Western Mediterranean Sea. Another
Rosalinda colony was discovered attached to a different hydroid colony -
Cladocarpus paradiseus - on the Jacksonville lithoherms at 595 m deep. This is the first time that researchers have observed this phenomenon. Other species of the Genus
Rosalinda were discovered in the
Bay of Biscay at approximately 440 m deep.
Rosalinda williami was spotted in the Northeastern Atlantic.
Rosalinda marlina was reported in shallow waters near Australia. Species of the Genus
Rosalinda have also been found in the Northwestern Pacific Ocean.
Rosalinda naumovi was identified in the shallower waters of the Northwestern Pacific while another unidentified species was discovered in
Sagami Bay, Japan. One research expedition discovered Rosalindidae species among coral mounds near the West African coast. These species were found growing on bivalves (
Bivalvia). Near
Northern Angola,
Rosalinda nowaldi colonized the bivalve
Acesta angolensis. Off the coast of
Mauritania,
Rosalinda lundalvi inhabited the bivalve
Acesta excavata. ==Reproduction==