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Tectus niloticus

Tectus niloticus
Tectus niloticus 01.JPG
Five views of a shell of Tectus niloticus
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Clade: Vetigastropoda
Superfamily: Trochoidea
Family: Tegulidae
Genus: Tectus
Species: T. niloticus
Binomial name
Tectus niloticus
(Linnaeus, 1767)
Synonyms
  • Trochus flammeus Röding, 1798
  • Trochus maximus Koch in Philippi, 1844
  • Trochus niloticus Linnaeus, 1767 (original combination)
  • Trochus zebra Perry, G., 1811

Tectus niloticus, common name the commercial top shell, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Tegulidae.

This marine species is widespread in the Indo-Pacific (Indian Ocean, New Ireland, New Caledonia, North Australia, French Polynesia, etc.).

Juveniles live in shallow areas on intertidal reef flats, while adults prefer atoll reefs along the reef crest or on reef slopes at depths of 0 to 20 m. These gastropods feed on very small plants and filamentous algae grazed on coral and rocks.

Tectus niloticus can live for up to 15 years and are able to reproduce at about 2 years of age. Females release more than 1 million eggs. Breeding period occurs during spring tides with nocturnal spawning. The eggs fertilised by males hatch to larval stages. Embryos develop into free-swimming planktonic marine larvae (trocophore) and later into juvenile veligers that drift with currents before settling on a rocky surface. After 2 or more years they may become adults.

The length of the shell varies between 50 mm and 165 mm, its diameter between 100 mm and 120 mm. The large, ponderous, shell has a conical shape, appearing subperforate. It is covered by a corneous striate, brown or yellowish cuticle usually lost on the upper whorls. Its color beneath the cuticle is white, longitudinally striped with crimson, violet or reddish brown. The base of the shell is maculate or radiately strigate with a lighter shade of the same. The spire is strictly conical. The apex is acute, usually eroded. The shell contains 8-10 whorls. The upper ones are tuberculate at the sutures, and spirally beaded, the following flat on their outer surfaces, smooth, separated by linear suture. The body whorl is expanded, dilated and compressed at the obtuse periphery, more or less convex below, indented at the axis. The umbilical tract is covered by a spiral pearly deeply entering callus. The aperture is transverse and very oblique. The columella is oblique, terminating in a denticle below, and with a strong spiral fold above, deeply inserted into the axis. The operculum is circular, thin, corneous, orange-brown, and composed of about 10 whorls.


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