Image: Hectonichus |
They belong to the Pustulate Cowry, an inch-long snail found in the eastern Pacific, from California down to Peru as well as Hawaii and the Galapagos Islands.
Image: Hectonichus |
False cowries usually have pale, wonderfully smooth shells that can be completely covered by the flesh of their colourful mantles. Not so the Pustulates!
Image: Femorale |
The mantle meanwhile, is far from the bright, multi-colours of so many other cowries. Instead, it's grey. It's attractive in its own way, though. The mantle is covered in long, branching sticky-out bits which are presumably sensitive to their surroundings.
Video: Eduardo Palacios
Pustulate Cowries spend the night nibbling on the polyps of various stone corals.
By morning they're hidden away, hopefully getting the medical care they need.
5 comments:
Bring out your dead!
wow! pretty!
Crunchy: Your beautiful, beautiful dead!
TexWisGirl: Definitely!
I bet you've been saving up! :)
Always!
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