Famelica monoceros is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Raphitomidae.[1]

Famelica monoceros
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Caenogastropoda
Order: Neogastropoda
Superfamily: Conoidea
Family: Raphitomidae
Genus: Famelica
Species:
F. monoceros
Binomial name
Famelica monoceros
(Watson, 1881)
Synonyms[1]
  • Clathurella monoceros (R. B. Watson, 1881)
  • Clathurella (Daphnella) monoceros (R. B. Watson, 1881)
  • Famelica ischna Dall, 1927
  • Mangilia ischna Dall, W.H., 1927
  • Pleurotoma (Thesbia ?) monoceros Watson, 1881

Description

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The length of the shell attains 4.6 mm.

The thin, ivory-white, high, narrow shell is drawn out, with fine spiral threads, a very oblique impressed suture, rounded whorls, and a contracted base produced into a longish snout.

Sculpture. Longitudinals—none but fine, somewhat unequal lines of growth. Spirals—with the exception of the sinus-area, the whole surface is covered by fine, rounded, unequal, and irregularly interrupted spiral threads with rather broader intervals. The colour is porcellaneous, ivory-white, glossy.

The spire is remarkably narrow, high, drawn out and conical. The apex is broken. There are five whorls remaining, but probably 8–9 in all, of very regular, but rather rapid increase, high, oblique, slightly tumid. The body whorl is rounded, with a conical, protracted, but very lop-sided base running out into a longish straight columella and triangular snout. The suture is very oblique and rather deeply impressed. The aperture is pear-shaped, scarcely pointed above, and protracted into a gradually narrowing siphonal canal below. The outer lip has a very regular curve in both its planes. The outer edge has a very high and prominent shoulder, whose upper side runs a long way parallel to the body whorl above it, having a very deep rather than narrow sinus, between which and the body whorl is no shelf whatever. The inner lip is on the narrow body scarcely perceptible as a glaze. On the long direct twisted columella it is a little thicker, but is very narrow : the end of the columella is cut off with a very long-drawn, oblique, slowly narrowing, sharp, twisted edge.[2]

Distribution

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This marine shell occurs off Sierra Leone and Georgia, USA

References

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  • Gofas, S.; Le Renard, J.; Bouchet, P. (2001). Mollusca. in: Costello, M.J. et al. (eds), European Register of Marine Species: a check-list of the marine species in Europe and a bibliography of guides to their identification. Patrimoines Naturels. 50: 180–213.
  • Bouchet, P.; Warén, A. (1980). Revision of the North-East Atlantic bathyal and abyssal Turridae (Mollusca: Gastropoda). Journal of Molluscan Studies. Suppl. 8: 1-119
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  • Tucker, J.K. (2004). "Catalog of recent and fossil turrids (Mollusca: Gastropoda)" (PDF). Zootaxa. 682: 1–1295.
  • Gastropods.com: Famelica monoceros
  • Dall W. H. (1927). Small shells from dredgings off the southeast coast of the United states by the United States Fisheries Steamer "Albatross", in 1885 and 1886. Proceedings of the United States National Museum, 70(18): 1-134