Date Added
April 30, 2024
08:51 AM UTC
Description
Local fishermen trawled from the Yellow Sea
Date Added
April 30, 2024
08:52 AM UTC
Description
Local fishermen trawled from the Yellow Sea
Date Added
February 29, 2024
04:02 PM KST
Date Added
February 29, 2024
07:34 PM KST
Description
Genus Cyclina is recorded as one species in South Korea. In South Korea, it is recorded as Cyclina sinensis. However, inaturalsit records it as 3 types.
So I brought a few from Anmyeondo Island in Taean, South Chungcheong Province, South Korea. I should have filmed it while it was collected, but I couldn't record it. And when I boiled it to make the noodle soup, the black skin turned white. The color of the shell changes depending on various circumstances, such as heat and time. I don't know how to distinguish between the three types.
Date Added
February 28, 2022
02:58 AM UTC
Date Added
January 13, 2024
01:02 PM UTC
Date Added
January 9, 2024
05:02 PM KST
Date Added
January 4, 2023
04:59 AM UTC
Date Added
December 28, 2023
11:18 AM UTC
Date Added
December 28, 2023
11:15 AM UTC
Date Added
January 1, 2024
04:07 AM UTC
Date Added
January 1, 2024
06:28 AM UTC
Date Added
January 2, 2024
08:11 AM UTC
Date Added
January 2, 2024
09:37 AM PST
Date Added
January 2, 2024
09:52 AM PST
Date Added
November 14, 2023
02:33 AM CST
Description
By offshore trawling, on Tetrarca boucardi
Date Added
December 17, 2023
06:46 PM CST
Date Added
December 9, 2023
05:19 AM CST
Date Added
December 17, 2023
06:46 PM CST
Date Added
December 9, 2023
06:37 PM EST
Description
a nice, acutely high-spired shell found 17 January 2014 at Quintana Beach County Park, during a huge winter washup of shells. This was the only rupicola found over several days, among 100s of freshly beached Epitonium angulatum. 21.1 mm
Date Added
December 9, 2023
06:27 PM EST
Description
1 of 2 found in rich shell drift by the tent camping area at Flamingo (Florida Bay), at the end of the Everglades National Park Road. I have never seen rupicola during multiple visits at this site until that day. According to Bruce Neville, this could be the 1st record from S. Florida (or at least the 1st such record that he or I are aware of). Generally the distribution of this species had previously appeared to be discontinuous from NE Florida to Collier or Lee County, SW Florida. Shell ca. 16.5mm
Date Added
December 9, 2023
06:15 PM EST
Description
from Sanibel Island, Florida,
August 1977
at 21.3mm, this is the largest rupicola I have seen from the west coast of Florida.
Place
Missing Location
Date Added
April 7, 2022
10:16 AM HKT
Date Added
June 6, 2023
12:08 AM EDT
Date Added
November 26, 2023
09:41 AM -01
Date Added
November 28, 2023
02:09 AM UTC
Date Added
November 12, 2023
01:09 AM UTC
Date Added
November 19, 2023
09:52 AM UTC
Description
Found around the bases of sea anemones
Date Added
November 14, 2023
02:34 AM CST
Date Added
November 14, 2023
02:34 AM CST
Date Added
November 2, 2023
08:30 AM UTC
Description
Trawled in the Yellow Sea Island Chaolian(潮连岛)
Date Added
November 2, 2023
08:26 AM UTC
Date Added
November 2, 2023
01:55 PM UTC
Date Added
November 2, 2023
01:48 PM UTC
Description
Trawled in the Yellow Sea Island Chaolian(潮连岛)
Date Added
July 24, 2023
06:53 PM CST
Date Added
June 28, 2023
08:16 PM CST
Date Added
July 24, 2023
12:19 AM CEST
Date Added
May 2, 2023
04:46 PM UTC
Date Added
October 3, 2023
04:09 PM KST
Date Added
July 21, 2023
07:13 PM KST
Date Added
July 15, 2023
10:05 PM CST
Date Added
July 15, 2023
10:05 PM CST
Date Added
July 15, 2023
10:51 PM CST
Date Added
August 6, 2023
02:43 PM KST
Date Added
July 3, 2023
07:50 PM KST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
April 29, 2023
10:58 AM CST
Date Added
June 23, 2022
06:06 PM CST
Date Added
April 30, 2022
06:31 PM CST
Date Added
April 24, 2022
05:11 PM CST
Description
Formalin soaked for more than a year, flesh and valves both color becomes lighter. Adolescent A. rubrolineata or A. dissimilis. Plasticizing specimens.
Date Added
April 24, 2022
05:11 PM CST
Date Added
April 24, 2022
05:11 PM CST
Date Added
April 16, 2022
09:48 PM CST
Date Added
March 12, 2023
05:14 PM UTC
Date Added
April 30, 2022
09:10 AM UTC
Date Added
October 7, 2021
05:02 PM -01
Date Added
March 9, 2023
03:31 PM UTC
Description
Shell has nodular projections in regular intervals on the surface
Date Added
June 7, 2023
05:17 AM UTC
Description
The big ones, pulled up in crab pot
Date Added
April 10, 2020
08:48 PM SAST
Date Added
April 23, 2015
11:28 AM EDT
Description
C. fornicata is the largest and by far the most commonly found slipper shell in Florida, especially on beaches. It is quite variable in shape and color, inside and out. It can be identified by the shape of the edge of the interior deck (when present). The deck is white with the edge strongly sinuate with two "waves."
Exterior color usually a white background with tan to brown blotches or radiating lines. Interior may range from all white to browns or purple, and may be streaked, spotted or all one color. Live specimens usually covered by a brown to tan periostracum.
Date Added
January 12, 2017
01:19 PM EST
Date Added
January 12, 2017
01:46 PM EST
Date Added
April 8, 2021
12:01 PM EDT
Description
Several hundred along shoreline.
Date Added
January 25, 2021
05:54 AM UTC
Date Added
July 6, 2022
04:49 PM UTC
Date Added
June 5, 2023
12:56 PM ADT
Description
Collected from shell hash, intertidal
Date Added
September 30, 2014
10:54 PM CDT
Description
The Yellow Egg Cockle, Laevicardium mortoni (Conrad, 1831), is a common bivalve found in beach drift at University Beach, Corpus Christi Bay, Texas. However, most shells found at this location are not very colorful. On 2013-04-12 I found a nicely colored empty specimen, which i took to the lab to photograph. This shell was about 12 mm (1/2 in) in diameter.
Its shell is subcircular, slightly triangular, with faint commarginal growth lines and fine radial threads. When viewed under magnification, the area near the ventral margin shows minute elongated blisters arranged in commarginal lines (as seen in a couple of photos below).
The coloration in fresh specimens (as the one figured here) is a dirty white to cream background with brown to purple maculations.
The species is found from Massachusetts to Florida and to Texas, from 0 to 84 m (275 ft) depth. In bays it is found near inlets.
Read more about this species in Tunnell et al (2010)’s Encyclopedia of Texas Seashells, page 355, and in the upcoming Texas Seashells, A Field Guide, on page 196.
Date Added
April 12, 2021
09:50 PM CST
Date Added
April 12, 2021
09:50 PM CST
Date Added
April 12, 2021
10:08 PM CST
Date Added
August 29, 2022
10:57 AM AEST
Date Added
January 13, 2022
07:05 PM JST
Date Added
December 6, 2022
03:54 PM ChST
Date Added
February 4, 2023
10:33 AM UTC
Date Added
February 9, 2023
08:45 AM UTC
Date Added
May 24, 2023
03:19 PM EDT
Date Added
December 21, 2022
04:38 PM PST
Date Added
September 7, 2021
10:11 PM UTC
Date Added
March 19, 2021
10:13 AM +10
Date Added
August 9, 2021
03:13 PM +10
Date Added
April 20, 2023
12:59 AM ADT
Description
Image 3 has a Skeneopsis planorbis (larger) for comparison.
Date Added
April 20, 2023
12:59 AM ADT
Description
not the small one upper left in image 1 (that is Omalogyra atomus).
Maybe not the white ones, unsure about those 2.
Date Added
April 20, 2023
12:59 AM ADT
Description
The upper left are all Hydrobiidae (Hydrobia/Ecrobia) and I think the rest are the same, just worn & no longer translucent, but I am not sure.
Date Added
April 29, 2023
02:20 AM UTC
Date Added
December 27, 2020
09:20 AM CST
Date Added
November 7, 2020
09:23 AM CET
Date Added
May 21, 2023
03:29 PM PDT
Date Added
July 17, 2022
02:46 PM CST
Date Added
June 18, 2022
08:12 PM CST
Date Added
June 18, 2022
08:12 PM CST
Date Added
June 18, 2022
08:12 PM CST
Date Added
April 24, 2022
05:11 PM CST
Date Added
April 19, 2022
10:47 AM CST
Date Added
April 17, 2022
03:04 PM CST