Cymbiola nobilis explained

Cymbiola nobilis (noble volute) is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Volutidae, the volutes. The snail's shell is commonly collected in the sea shell trade, which has resulted in overharvesting of the snail.

Taxonomy and naming

The snail is a member of the phylum Mollusca, the class Gastropoda, the family Volutidae, and the genus Cymbiola. It was first discovered in 1786.[1]

Subspecies

Distribution

Cymbiola nobilis is widespread in Asia from Taiwan to Vietnam, peninsular Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore and Philippines.[1] [2] [3]

Description

Shells of Cymbiola nobilis can reach a length of 50-, with an average size of six centimeters.[1] Females tend to be larger than the males.[4]

These fairy large, thick and heavy shells are glossy, with plaits on the columella. They have a wide variety of patterns.[5] The shell colour may be beige, orange or yellow with a zig-zag red or brown pattern. Sometimes these shells are completely black. The fleshy body of the snail is black with bright yellow or orange spots.

Pigment producing cells infect nearby cells so that they also produce pigment. Cells that are infected once become immune to producing pigment again. As a result, the coloring of the snail's shell forms the characteristic pattern.[6] [7]

Habitat

This species lives in a marine environment and can be found on sandy reef flats and sandy areas near coral rubble and seagrasses.[1] [8] [3]

Populations of Cymbiola nobilis are present in small and isolated areas and are often close by, but separated by geographic barriers such as water channels. Each separate range has its own shell form and color pattern.[5]

Conservation Status

The snail is considered vulnerable.[1] The number of Cymbiola nobilis has been greatly reduced by reef destruction and collection as food and for the marine curio and shell trade.[1] The snail was once commonly found in reefs around Singapore, but they have become much scarcer. The government of Singapore has stated that laws are needed to restrict the collection of wildlife fauna such as Cymbiola nobilis.[1]

Behavior

Reproduction

The snails are to a certain extent hermaphrodites, but separate sexes exist, and the snails reproduce through sexual reproduction.[9] The female is fertilized by the male internally, and the female responds by depositing fertilized eggs.[5] The egg capsules laid by the female contain multiple embryos.[1] It takes about seven days for the eggs to hatch into larvae. Embryos develop into free-swimming planktonic marine larvae (trochophore) and later into juvenile veligers.[3] Altogether, the snail goes through eight stages of development before becoming a full-fledged snail.[4]

Diet

The C. nobilis is carnivorous, and preys on small animals such as bivalves,[1] [3] other mollusks and echinoderms.[5]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: National Parks Board, Singapore Government . 2014-05-31 . 2018-02-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20180217082546/https://florafaunaweb.nparks.gov.sg/special-pages/animal-detail.aspx?id=205 . dead .
  2. Claudio Galli: WMSDB - Worldwide Mollusc Species Data Base
  3. http://www.sealifebase.org/summary/Cymbiola-nobilis.html Sealife Base
  4. Web site: Noorsakinah. Development and Growth of Larvae of the Volute, Cymbiola nobilis Lightfoot. https://web.archive.org/web/20140531124236/http://connection.ebscohost.com/c/articles/93380686/development-growth-larvae-volute-cymbiola-nobilis-lightfoot. dead. 31 May 2014. EBSCO. 31 May 2014.
  5. Beechey, Des. "Family Volutidae Australian Museum
  6. Book: Prusinkiewicz, Przemyslaw. The Algorithmic Beauty of Sea Shells. 2009. Springer. 48. 9783540921424.
  7. https://www.biolib.cz/en/taxon/id576151/ Biolib
  8. http://www.wildsingapore.com/wildfacts/mollusca/gastropoda/volutidae/nobilis.htm Wild Singapore
  9. Web site: Swennen. Cornelis. Contributions to Zoology. University of Amsterdam. 31 May 2014.