Mauritia grayana | |
---|---|
Mauritia grayana, anterior end towards the right | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda |
(unranked): | clade Caenogastropoda clade Hypsogastropoda clade Littorinimorpha |
Superfamily: | Cypraeoidea |
Family: | Cypraeidae |
Genus: | Mauritia |
Species: | M. grayana |
Binomial name | |
Mauritia grayana Schilder, 1930 |
|
Synonyms[1] | |
Cypraea grayana (Schilder, 1930) |
Mauritia grayana, the 'Gray's Arabica Cowry', is a species of sea snail, a cowry, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Cypraeidae, the cowries.[1]
Contents |
These quite common shells reach on average 44β52 millimetres (1.7β2.0 in) of length, with a maximum size of 80 millimetres (3.1 in) and a minimum size of 17 millimetres (0.67 in). Mauritia grayana has an oval, smooth and shiny shell. The dorsum surface is light gray- brown, with several gray spots and many thin longitudinal lines. In the middle of dorsum there is a wide longitudinal stripe. Close to the edges there is a graysh wide frame with several dark brown spots. The base is pale brown, with a wide aperture and fine dark brown teeth on outer and inner lips. In the living cowries the mantle is well developed, quite graysh and almost trasparent, with short papillae and external antennae.
This arabian endemic species is distributed in the Red Sea and in the Western Indian Ocean along Eritrea, Somalia and Pakistan.
These mollusks live in tropical shallow waters, mainly at about 2β5 metres (6 ft 7 inβ16 ft 5 in) of depth, often in the low intertidal zone. During the day the living cowries are usualli hidden in coral caves or beneath the reef block, as they fear the light. They start feeding at dawn or dusk on sponges or coral polyps.