Margarites costalis

Margarites costalis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Clade: Vetigastropoda
Superfamily: Trochoidea
Family: Turbinidae
Genus: Margarites
Species: M. costalis
Binomial name
Margarites costalis
(Gould, 1841) [1]
Synonyms[2]
  • Margarita elatior Middendorff, 1849
  • Margarita genuina Middendorff, 1849
  • Margarita grandis Mörch, 1857
  • Margarita groenlandica Möller, H.P.C., 1842
  • Margarita major Dautzenberg & Fischer, 1912
  • Margarita striata Broderip & Sowerby, 1829
  • Margarites cinereus Filatova, Z.A. & B.I. Zatsepin, 1948
  • Margarites costalis costalis (Gould, 1841)
  • Margarites (Pupillaria) rudis Dall, 1919
  • Margarites striata striata Galkin, Y.I., 1955
  • Margarites (Costomargarites) costalis (Gould, 1841)
  • Trochus corneus Kiener, 1848
  • Trochus costalis Gould, 1841 (original combination)
  • Trochus polaris Philippi, 1850
  • Turbo cinereus Couthouy, 1838

Margarites costalis, common name the boreal rosy margarite or the northern ridged margarite, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Margaritidae.[2]

Subspecies

Description

The size of the shell varies between 5 mm and 25 mm. It is a conical, grayish (sometimes with rose or creamy tint), deeply umbilicate shell with five evenly rounded whorls. The sculpture shows strong, distant, spiral ridges, crossed by 10 to 12 fine, raised axial threads. The thin, finely crenulate outer lip is sharp. The pearly rose aperture is round.[3]

(Original description by W.H. Dall of the synonym Margarites (Pupillaria) rudis) The shell is of moderate size. It is white with a pale olivaceous periostracum. The smooth nucleus consists of about one whorl and five subsequent whorls. The spiral sculpture consists of two strong cords with wider interspaces and a thud on which the suture is laid and which forms the margin of the base. There is also a small thread between the suture and the posterior cord and on the body whorl a similar thread in the interspaces. On the base there are six or seven smaller closer cords separated by obscurely channeled interspaces between the verge of a narrow umbilicus and the basal margin. The axial sculpture consists of (on the penultimate whorl about 20) retractive riblets extending from suture to periphery, with wider interspaces, slightly nodulous at the intersections with the spiral cords. There are also close obvious incremental regular lines over the whole surface. The simple, rounded aperture is quadrate. There is a glaze on the body. The inner lip is slightly thickened. The operculum is multispiral.[4]

Distribution

This marine species occurs in circum-arctic waters; from Labrador, Canada and Greenland to Cape Cod, USA; from the Bering Strait to Southern Alaska

References

  1. Gould, A. A. 1841. Report on the Invertebrata of Massachusetts. xiii + 373 pp. Commissioners on the Zoological and Botanical Survey of the State: Cambridge, Massachusetts.
  2. 1 2 Margarites costalis (Gould, 1841).  Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 20 April 2010.
  3. R. Tucker Abbott (1954), American Seashells; Van Nostrand Rheinhold, New York
  4. Dall (1919) Descriptions of new species of Mollusca from the North Pacific Ocean; Proceeding of the U.S. National Museum, vol. 56 (1920)
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