Description
Author: Jan Delsing
Text ID: 131515
Text Type: 1
Page: 0
Created: 2024-12-16 19:55:16 - User Delsing Jan
Language: EN
Text function: [[t:587886,textblock=131515,elang=EN;Description]]
Fossarus garrettii Pease, 1868. (Synonym: Adeorbis costata Garrett, 1857, non Brocchi, 1814.) Length, 4 mm; diameter, 3.5 mm. Shell: turbiniform, solid; with prominent spiral keels; white. Spire: protoconch of two obliquely set brown, cancellate whorls; teleoconch of three whorls, the last the largest. Sculpture: three or four prominent spiral cords, the interspaces approximately one-third the diameter of the cords with fine spiral threads. Aperture: subovate, outer lip reflected outward; umbilicus narrow; base with a projecting flange separated from the columella which is reflected over it. Color: white.
Specimens are occasionally found under rocks in tide pools; beachworn shells are common in drift.
F. garrettii may be endemic to the Hawaiian Islands; it is distinguished from F. trochlearis (A. Adams, 1855a) from the Seychelles, Bombay, New Caledonia, and southern Japan by its more obtuse shape, shorter spire, wider, grooved keels, and regularly striate interspaces.
Kay, E.A., 1979. Hawaiian Marine Shells. Reef and Shore Fauna of Hawaii. Section 4: Mollusca.