Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Pleuroploca trapezium

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Kingdom
  
Superfamily
  
Genus
  
Phylum
  
Class
  
Family
  
Scientific name
  
Pleuroploca trapezium

Rank
  
Species

Pleuroploca trapezium wwwgastropodscomShellImagesPRPleuroplocatr

Similar
  
Pleuroploca, Filifusus filamentosus, Fasciolariidae, Triplofusus giganteus, Fasciolaria

Pleuroploca trapezium, common name : the trapezium horse conch, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Fasciolariidae, the spindle snails, the tulip snails and their allies.

Contents

This species is sought after for food but also to be used as a trumpet when the tip of the spire is cut off.

Subspecies and formae

  • Subspecies Pleuroploca trapezium audouini (Jonas, 1846)
  • Forma Pleuroploca trapezium f. intermedia (Kobelt, 1875)
  • Forma Pleuroploca trapezium f. paeteli (Strebel, 1911)
  • Description

    The golden brown shell is solid and heavy. Its shell size varies between 85 mm and 250 mm with a common length of 200 mm. The spire is of moderate length. The apex is usually eroded. The sutures are constricted. The shoulders on the whorls are covered with spiral rows of slightly pointed strong nodules. The surface is covered with fine, brown, incised spiral lines, mainly in pairs. The outer lip is dentate with seven pairs of teeth, situated where the paired lines meet the edge. The oval aperture is pale with strong ridges internally. The columella is smooth posteriorly. The siphonal canal is extended and short. The fasciole is weak.

    Pleuroploca trapezium has been observed preying on the spiny cerith (Cerithium echinatum) in the Seychelles.

    Distribution

    This species is distributed in the Red Sea and in the Indian Ocean along Aldabra, Madagascar, Mauritius, Mozambique, RĂ©union, South Africa and Tanzania; in the Pacific Ocean from Japan down to Melanesia, New Caledonia and North Queensland but rarely along Australian coasts.

    Habitat

    This species can be found in the benthic zone on seagrass beds at depths between 0 - 40 m.

    References

    Pleuroploca trapezium Wikipedia