iDENTIFICATION
|
01-03-2015, 02:31 AM,
|
|||
|
|||
iDENTIFICATION
HI THERE--COULD SOMEONE HELP ME IDENTIFY THESE SHELLS-THANKS
|
|||
01-04-2015, 01:40 AM,
|
|||
|
|||
RE: iDENTIFICATION
It's hard to see the colors, but I think in the first picture they are Malea pomum and Conus textile, and on the 2nd picture the white shell is a Cypraea tigris...
|
|||
01-05-2015, 02:30 PM,
(This post was last modified: 01-05-2015, 02:43 PM by paul monfils.)
|
|||
|
|||
RE: iDENTIFICATION
Picture 1, left, is Semicassis centiquadrata (Valenciennes, 1832)
http://www.conchology.be/?t=66&family=CA...tiquadrata Picture 2, left, is an immature Melongena patula (Broderip & Sowerby, 1829) http://www.gastropods.com/1/Shell_1111.shtml Both of these are from West Central America. Picture 3 is an Astraea, in the family Turbinidae. The thick fibrous periostracum hides much of the shell detail, but I think it may be an immature Megastraea undosa (Wood, 1828), which occurs from southern California to outer Baja California. http://www.gastropods.com/2/Shell_292.shtml http://www.conchology.be/?t=68&u=272060&...acf580f08a Pictures 5 and 6 show a Carrier Shell, Xenophora. Carrier shells can often be identified by the kinds of other shells they have attached to themselves. However, this carrier is just covered with small hard to identify bivalves (probably Cardita species), many of which are worn and/or encrusted, so unless you have some idea where this shell was collected, I cannot identify the species with any certainty. The other two shells (#1 right and #2 right) have been identified by the poster above (Bence Cs.) These are both Indo-Pacific species. |
|||
« Next Oldest | Next Newest »
|
Users browsing this thread: 2 Guest(s)