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Taxonomy: For all marine species, Project Gastropods uses the taxonomy in the online database WoRMS. When starting a new article, do not use sources of taxonomic information that predate the 2017 revision for all gastropod groups ("Revised Classification, Nomenclator and Typification of Gastropod and Monoplacophoran Families" by Philippe Bouchet & Jean-Pierre Rocroi, Bernhard Hausdorf, Andrzej Kaim, Yasunori Kano, Alexander Nützel, Pavel Parkhaev, Michael Schrödl and Ellen E. Strong in Malacologia, 2017, 61(1–2): 1–526.) (can be dowloaded at Researchgate.net), substituting the previous classification of 2005 Taxonomy of the Gastropoda (Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005). If you need help with any aspect of an article, please leave a note at the Project talk page.
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Latest comment: 15 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
The photo attached to this article is NOT a knobbed whelk, it is a lightning whelk.
A knobbed whelk has more prominent knobs, but more importantly the aperture of the shell is on the wrong side for a knobbed whelk. A knobbed whelk opens to the right while a lightning whelk opens to the left.
Furthermore, the knobbed whelk is NOT the largest whelk species. The lightning whelk gets up to 16 inches (and I have such a specimen myself) whereas the knobbed whelk tops out at 12 inches.
Note that the the distinctive coloration that gives the lightning whelk its name, as obvious in the photo of the page linked to above, typically fades as the whelk reaches the upper limits of its size, which is why the lightning whelk shown in the photo on the knobbed whelk page is whitish.
Latest comment: 16 years ago1 comment1 person in discussion
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