Olivella biplicata

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Olivella biplicata
Olivella biplicata
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
(unranked): clade Caenogastropoda

clade Hypsogastropoda
clade Neogastropoda

Superfamily: Olivoidea
Family: Olivellidae
Genus: Olivella
Species: O. biplicata
Binomial name
Olivella biplicata
Sowerby, 1825

Olivella biplicata, common names the "purple dwarf olive" "purple olive shell" or "purple olivella" is a species of small predatory sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Olivellidae, the dwarf olives.

Distribution

Olivella biplicata snails are found in the Eastern Pacific Ocean coasts from British Columbia, Canada to Baja California, Mexico.[1]

Habitat

This species is common on sandy substrates intertidally and subtidally, in bays and the outer coast.[1]

Life habits

Three specimen of Olivella biplicata.

These snails are carnivorous or omnivorous sand-burrowers.

Shell description

This shell of this species is quite solid, and large for an Olivella, with adult shells ranging from 20 mm to 27 mm in length, about one inch. The shell is smooth, shiny, and is an elongated oval in shape. The shell is often a some shade of greyish purple, but it can also be whitish, tan, or dark brown. On the darker color forms there is often some rich yellow above the suture on the spire.

At the anterior end of the long narrow aperture there is a siphonal notch, from which the siphon of the living animal protrudes.

'Hermit crab using the shell of Olivella biplicata

Human use

Native people of central and southern California used the shell of this species to make decorative beads for at least the last 9,000 years.[2] Such beads have been discovered in archaeological contexts as far inland as Idaho and Arizona.[3] Within the past 1,000 years these beads began to be manufactured in large quantities on southern California's Santa Barbara Channel Islands, indicating that they were used for shell money.[4] The historic Chumash people called them anchum.[5]

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Dave Cowles. 2005. Olivella biplicata (Sowerby, 1825). accessed 22 November 2008.
  2. Bennyhoff and Hughes 1987
  3. Fitzgerald et al. 2005
  4. Arnold and Graesch 2001
  5. Daily Life in a Chumash village. last change 4 August 2005, accessed 22 November 2008.

References

  • Arnold, J.E. and A.P. Graesch. 2001. The Evolution of Specialized Shellworking Among the Island Chumash. In The Origins of a Pacific Coast Chiefdom: the Chumash of the Channel Islands, edited by J.E. Arnold, pp. 71–112. Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press.
  • Bennyhoff, James A. and Richard E. Hughes. 1987. Shell Bead and Ornament Exchange Networks between California and the Western Great Basin. Anthropological Papers of the American Museum of Natural History 64:79-175.
  • Fitzgerald, Richard T., Terry L. Jones, and Adele Schroth. 2005. Ancient Long Distance Trade in Western North America: New AMS Radiocarbon Dates from Southern California. Journal of Archaeological Science 32:423-434.

External links

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