Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Charonia tritonis

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Kingdom
  
Family
  
Ranellidae

Genus
  
Rank
  
Species

Higher classification
  
Charonia

Superfamily
  
Tonnoidea

Subfamily
  
Cymatiinae

Scientific name
  
Charonia tritonis

Phylum
  
Charonia tritonis Charonia tritonis III

Similar
  
Charonia, Crown‑of‑thorns starfish, Ranellidae, Molluscs, Gastropods

Live triton shell charonia tritonis


Charonia tritonis, common name the Triton's trumpet or the giant triton, is a species of very large sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Ranellidae, the tritons. Reaching up to two feet (or 60 cm) in shell length this is one of the biggest mollusks in the coral reef.

Contents

Charonia tritonis Charonia tritonis III

Charonia tritonis variegata 1 english version


Distribution

This species is found throughout the Indo-Pacific Oceans, Red Sea included.

Human use

Charonia tritonis Charonia tritonis

The shell is well known as a decorative object, and is sometimes modified for use as a trumpet (such as the Japanese horagai, the Maldivian sangu or the Māori pūtātara).

Charonia tritonis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

C. tritonis is one of the few animals to feed on the crown-of-thorns starfish, Acanthaster planci. Occasional plagues of this large and destructive starfish have killed extensive areas of coral on the Great Barrier Reef of Australia and the western Pacific reefs. The triton has been described as tearing the starfish to pieces with its file-like radula.

Charonia tritonis Charoniatritonisjpg

Much debate has occurred on whether plagues of crown-of-thorns starfish are natural or are caused by overfishing of the few organisms that can eat this starfish, including C. tritonis. In 1994, Australia proposed that C. tritonis should be put on the CITES list, thereby attempting to protect the species. Because of a lack of trade data concerning this seashell, the Berne Criteria from CITES were not met, and the proposal was consequently withdrawn. While this species may be protected in Australia and other countries (such as India), it can be legally traded and is found for sale in many shell shops around the world and on the Internet.

Charonia tritonis Charoniatritonis1jpg

References

Charonia tritonis Wikipedia