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Amoria damonii

Amoria damonii
Amoria damonii 001.jpg
Apertural view of a shell of Amoria damonii
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
(unranked): clade Caenogastropoda
clade Hypsogastropoda
clade Neogastropoda
Superfamily: Muricoidea
Family: Volutidae
Subfamily: Amoriinae
Genus: Amoria
Subgenus: Amoria
Species: A. damonii
Binomial name
Amoria damonii
Gray, 1864
Synonyms
  • Amoria (Amoria) keatsiana Ludbrook, 1953
  • Scaphella hedleyi Iredale, 1914
  • Voluta gatliffi Sowerby III, 1910
  • Voluta reticulata Reeve, 1844

Amoria damonii, common name Damon's Volute, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Volutidae, the volutes. It forms a complex of attractive, large shells which has been studied extensively by Abbottsmith.

It was named in honor of English conchologist Robert Damon (1814–1889).

According to Bail et al. (2001) the following taxa can be differentiated:

Amoria damonii has a large size that varies between 75 and 140 mm. The is glossy, domed, white on the early whorls, tawny later. The spire is conical with a deep-set suture.

The Amoria damonii complex includes four large, evidently correlated populations of Amoria, whose distribution extends from Cape Leeuwin (S.W. Australia) to the northern east coast of Queensland, i.e. for more than 6,500 km of coastline. Such a large range, rare in Volutidae, is even more unusual for an Amoria. This long stretch of coastline implies genetic differentiation and favours polytypism, giving rise to many taxonomic problems.

These marine gastropod molluscs occur in tropical zones on continental shelf, intertidal and subtidal waters, at depths of 0 to 90 m.



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