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Cellana strigilis strigilis (Hombron & Jacquinot, 1841)
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Lottia filosa (Carpenter, 1865)
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Lottia dorsuosa (Gould, 1859)
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Summary[
edit] Description: English: Specimen of shell (Mollusca) in the 2017 echibition at Beijing Museum of Natural History. The shell is collected from the Gulf of Tonkin,by the Natural History Museum of Guangxi. Date: 13 July 2017, 12:44:22. Source: Own work. Author:
Bjoertvedt. Camera location
39° 52′ 53.37″ N, 116° 23′ 37.7″ E View all coordinates using:
OpenStreetMap -
Google Earth 39.881492; 116.393806.
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Nipponacmea concinna (Lischke, 1870)
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PRESERVED_SPECIMEN; Paralepetopsis lepichoni Warén & Bouchet, 2001; Type status: HOLOTYPE; Identified by:N/A; Individual count:1; Event date: N/A
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Patelloida alticostata (Angas, 1865)
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Scurria ceciliana (d'Orbigny, 1841)
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Patelloida saccharina (Linnaeus, 1758)
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Dorsal..
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New Zealand, North Island, collected 1972, ex coll. F.J.A. Slieker Jr.. Image by Joop Trausel and Frans Slieker
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New Zealand, Otago, Dunedin, St. Clair Beach, in shell sand, collected 4th October 1981, ex coll. M.A. Wotton. Image by Joop Trausel and Frans Slieker
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Registration number = ZIN 217/1. Type locality = Bolshoi Shantar Island, Okhotsk Sea, intertidal pool. Size = 10.8 mm
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Scurria zebrina (Lesson, 1830)
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Patelloida conulus (Dunker, 1861)
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Nacella mytilina (Helbling, 1779)
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Cellana flava (Hutton, 1873)
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Cellana talcosa (Gould, 1846)
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Summary[
edit] Description: English:
Lottia gigantea Owl Limpet (Lottia gigantea) - : It is most abundant in California and favors vertical rock faces in wave-swept areas in the upper littoral zone. It grows slowly and may live for up to 20 years. It browses on microalgae growing on rock surfaces. The owl limpet is a territorial species and some individuals return to the same specific location every time the tide goes out. The limpet's contours grow to fit the rock surface tightly. Large female limpets graze on the film of algae growing on rocks and defend their territory against other owl limpets, mobile gastropods, mussels, sea anemones, barnacles and macroalgae. They dislodge large competitors by pushing them away with the anterior part of the shell, and if barnacles settle, they are rasped away with the radula. Date: 20 March 2016. Source:
Cabrillo National Monument. Author: Credit: Cabrillo National Monument.
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Lottia pelta (Rathke, 1833)
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Lottia leucopleura (Gmelin, 1791)
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Acmaea mitra Rathke, 1833