Hebrew moon snail
Hebrew moon snail | ||||||||||||
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Natica hebraea in situ |
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Systematics | ||||||||||||
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Scientific name | ||||||||||||
Natica hebraea | ||||||||||||
Martyn , 1784 |
The naticarius hebraeus or Hebrew umbilical screw ( Natica hebraea ) is a screw from the family of the moon screw extending from molluscs fed. It lives in the Mediterranean and adjacent areas of the Atlantic .
features
The egg-shaped, inflated, rather thin-shelled snail shell of Natica hebraea , which in adult snails can be up to 4.5 to 5.5 cm in length and up to 5.1 cm in diameter, has a smooth, shiny surface, with the seam oblique radial furrows. The umbilical bulge is large and separated from the ingrown, thickened part of the inner lip by a narrow incision at the top. The case mouth has a columellar rim and is dark brown inside. The basic color is whitish, but becomes bluish towards the tip and darker and darker, finally black. Dark brown welts, interrupted by narrow whitish transverse bands, run parallel to the growth strips. A narrow, milky white band runs along the seam. The umbilical region and inner lip are white, the adjoining brown welts appear as square spots.
The operculum of the Hebrew moon snail is semicircular, horny and calcified on the outside with numerous sharp ribs.
The mesopodium and propodium of the snail surround the snail shell with the same width when crawling. Irregular, indistinct brownish spots and stripes are distributed over the entire foot. The feelers are dark. The animal cannot completely cover its housing with its foot, only the lower edge is covered when crawling.
Distribution and way of life
The Hebrew moon snail occurs in the Mediterranean and adjacent areas of the Atlantic . Natica hebraea is very common on sandy Mediterranean soils. It lives below the intertidal zone. Like other moon snails, the nocturnal feeding Natica hebraea of clams and snails . The prey is grasped with the foot and a hole is drilled in the shell with the radula .
literature
- Betty Jean Piech: Naticidae and Personidae: A Classification of Recent Species . Delaware Museum of Natural History, Wilmington, DE 1998, 60 pp.
Individual evidence
- ↑ Rodolfo Amando Philippi: The genera Natica and Amaura . Systematic Conchylia Cabinet. Nuremberg, 1852. 73. No. 86. Natica hebraea . Ph.
Web links
- Fischhaus Zepkow: Family Naticidae - moon snails
- Thomas Huelsken, Carina Marek, Stefan Schreiber, Iris Schmidt, Michael Hollmann (2008): The Naticidae (Mollusca: Gastropoda) of Giglio Island (Tuscany, Italy): Shell characters, live animals, and a molecular analysis of egg masses (PDF; 1.2 MB) . Zootaxa 1770: 1-40 (2008). Naticarius hebraeus , p. 18f.
- Naticidae , p. 598ff. Naticarius hebraeus (Martyn, 1784) , p. 602 (French, on the FAO website). JM Gaillard: Gasteropodes (p. 514ff.). From: W. Fischer, M. Schneider, M.-L. Bauchot: Guide FAO d'Identification des Espèces pour les Besoins de la Pêche. Mediterranée et Mer Noire . Organization des Nations Unies pour l'Alimentation et l'Agriculture, Rome, 1987.
- World Register of Marine Species , World Marine Mollusca database: Natica hebraea (Martyn, 1786)