Tegula hotessieriana

Tegula hotessieriana
Drawing with two views of a shell of Tegula hotessieriana
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Clade: Vetigastropoda
Superfamily: Trochoidea
Family: Tegulidae
Genus: Tegula (gastropod)
Species: T. hotessieriana
Binomial name
Tegula hotessieriana
(d’Orbigny, 1842) [1]
Synonyms
  • Chlorostoma maculostriata C. B. Adams, 1845
  • Chlorostoma maculostriatum C.B. Adams, 1845
  • Monodonta maculostriata C. B. Adams, 1845
  • Neomphalius maculostriata C. B. Adams, 1845
  • Trochus hotessierianus d'Orbigny, 1842 (original description)
  • Trochus maculostriatus Philippi

Tegula hotessieriana is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Tegulidae.[2]

Description

The size of the shell varies between 5 mm and 13 mm. The solid, umbilicate shell has a conical shape. It is deep green, brown, pinkish or olivaceous, more or less dotted with white and a self-color, sometimes radiately flammulated with white. A tract around the umbilicus is white, tessellated with brown. The spire is elevated, sometimes scalariform. The apex acute. The upper whorls are slightly convex. The body whorl is convex, depressed below the suture and, rounded at the periphery. The whole surface bears numerous low, smooth spiral striae, which are often subobsolete on the body whorl, and it is then nearly smooth. The base of the shell is concave in the middle. The aperture is rounded-quadrate, smooth within or finely lirate. The columella is slightly sinuous, bidentate at base, expanding in a callus above, which slightly impinges upon the umbilicus.[3]

Distribution

This species occurs in the Caribbean Sea, the Gulf of Mexico, off the Lesser Antilles; in the Atlantic Ocean along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge and off Brazil.

References

  1. d'Orbigny, A. 1842. Mollusques. Histoire Physique, Politique et Naturelle de l'île de Cuba 2: 1-112, pls. 10-21?. Arthus Bertrand: Paris.
  2. Tegula hotessieriana (d’Orbigny, 1842).  Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 20 April 2010.
  3. Tryon (1889), Manual of Conchology XI, Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia (described as Chlorostoma maculostriatum)
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