Favartia taylorae explained

Favartia (Murexiella) taylorae taylorae is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails.

Description

Original description: "Shell small for genus, with oval body, elevated spire and long siphonal canal; 7 varices per whorl; varices with 6 large, strongly recurved spines; intervarical areas with 6 large fimbriated cords; siphonal canal with 2 large recurved spines; last spines of siphonal canal greatly recurved, almost touching varical spines; shoulder sharply angled; spire whorls tabulate; shell color rosy-tan with dark rose spots in pits at the base of each varix; siphonal canal pinkish-rose; interior of aperture pinkish-rose."[1]

The shell grows to a length of 16 mm

Distribution

Locus typicus: "(Trawled from) 200 metres depthoff Cedar Key, Florida, USA."[2]

This species is distributed in the Gulf of Mexico along Florida.

References

Notes and References

  1. Petuch, E.J. 1987-New Caribbean Molluscan Faunas, page 26. Publ: CERF
  2. Petuch, E.J. 1987-New Caribbean Molluscan Faunas, page 26. Publ: CERF