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Look Alikes

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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: Nucella ostrina has a thick shell and spiral ridges of 2 different sizes. Nucella lamellosa has only a few large spiral ridges on each whorl and may also have longitudinal ribs or frilly lamellae. Acanthina spirata has a large tooth on the outer lip of the aperture.
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Habitat

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Rocky intertidal, often in or near mussel beds. On protected or exposed coasts. May be very abundant at some exposed sites on the Olympic Peninsula
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Distribution

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Geographical Range: Aleutian Islands to Cayucos, San Luis Obispo County, CA; uncommon north of Puget Sound or south of San Francisco Bay.
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Invertebrates of the Salish Sea

Habitat

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Depth Range: Middle intertidal.
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Comprehensive Description

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Like all members of family Nucellidae, this species has a strong shell with a well-developed spire, a short siphonal notch or canal but no anal notch. The shell is not highly polished. The animal has a horny operculum. Nucella canaliculata has no frilly lamellae. The shell sculpture consists of many well-defined spiral ridges of approximately equal size. The whorls are set off from one another by a deep groove. Small individuals such as this one may be orange; older individuals are often yellowish brown or light gray. The aperture may be bright yellow. Length to 4 cm.
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Comprehensive Description

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Biology/Natural History: This species does not range as high in the intertidal as does N. ostrina, but higher than does N. lamellosa. Its main prey is Mytilus spp, and secondarily it feeds on barnacles such as Semibalanus cariosus. It drills shells by softening them with a secretion from the foot, then drilling through with the radula. It usually takes 1-2 days to drill and eat a prey individual. Breeding is in spring and summer. Females attach their eggs to rocks in flask-shaped capsules, each of which may contain 15-55 eggs. Some of the eggs may be abortive and consumed by other larvae as they grow within the capsule. The young emerge from the capsule as benthic, juvenile snails about 1.3 mm in shell length. In the study by Sorte and Hofmann, thermotolerance of different Nucella species along the coast was found to be correlated with the latitude range and tidal height each species occupies. N. ostrina, which occurs higher in the intertidal than does N. canaliculata in Oregon and does not extend as far north, had higher heat tolerance than did N. canaliculata. N. emarginata, which extends the farthest south, and N. ostrina, which lives higher in the intertidal, recovered more quickly from thermal exposure than did N. canaliculata and N. lamellosa, which live lower in the intertidal, and N. lima, which has a more northern range. These differences in heat tolerance may be related to HSP70 molecular chaperones. The famous purple dye from the city of Tyre, that colored royal Roman robes, was made from a relative of Nucella. The snails were ground up in a stone mortar; different combinations made different shades of purple. The dye should be fixed with lemon juice as a mordant. The American species produce a much less brilliant purple than do the Mediterranean species.
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Nucella canaliculata

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Nucella canaliculata, commonly known as the channeled dog winkle or the channeled purple,[2] is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails.[1] The shell grows to a maximum length of about 4 cm (1.6 in). This species is distributed in the northeastern Pacific Ocean from the Aleutian Islands to California.

Description

Apertural view of N. caniculata

Nucella canaliculata has a robust shell with a strong spire, a short notch to house the siphon, and up to seven whorls. The whorls are demarcated from each other by deep grooves and are sculpted with many low spiral ridges of approximately even size. The surface of the shell is matt; small individuals are often orange while larger ones are grayish or pale brown. The margins of the aperture are often yellow, and the animal's soft parts are protected by a horny operculum. The maximum length of this species is about 4 cm (1.6 in).[2] This dog winkle can be distinguished from the frilled dog winkle (Nucella lamellosa) by the absence of frilled decoration, and from the northern striped dog winkle (Nucella ostrina) by the evenness of the size of the sculpted ridges.[2]

Distribution

This dog winkle is native to the Pacific coasts of North America. Its range extends from the Aleutian Islands off Alaska to San Luis Obispo County, California, but it is uncommon to the north of Puget Sound or to the south of San Francisco Bay. It is found on both exposed and sheltered rocks in the intertidal zone and is particularly common in wave-exposed areas of the Olympic Peninsula and near mussel beds.[2]

Ecology

N. canaliculata is a predator and feeds on mussels and barnacles by drilling a hole through the shell. Researchers found that the dog winkle was more successful at drilling into the barnacle Semibalanus cariosus when it drills between the lateral plates rather than through them. A toxin is then injected through the hole which causes the barnacle's muscles to relax and the opercular valves to gape, whereupon the dog winkle can easily consume the soft tissues.[3]

References

  1. ^ a b Nucella canaliculata (Duclos, 1832). Retrieved through: World Register of Marine Species on 24 April 2010.
  2. ^ a b c d Cowles, Dave (2005). "Nucella canaliculata (Duclos, 1832)". Invertebrates of the Salish Sea. Retrieved 16 January 2019.
  3. ^ Ansell, Alan; Gibson, R.N.; Barnes, Margaret (1999). Oceanography and Marine Biology, An Annual Review. CRC Press. pp. 187–189. ISBN 978-0-7484-0919-8.

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Nucella canaliculata: Brief Summary

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Nucella canaliculata, commonly known as the channeled dog winkle or the channeled purple, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Muricidae, the murex snails or rock snails. The shell grows to a maximum length of about 4 cm (1.6 in). This species is distributed in the northeastern Pacific Ocean from the Aleutian Islands to California.

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