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Taxon profile

species

Hercules' Club Mud-creeper
Pyrazus ebeninus (Bruguière, 1792)

kingdom Animalia - animals »  phylum Mollusca - mollusks »  class Gastropoda - gastropods »  family Batillariidae »  genus Pyrazus

Scientific synonyms

Cerithium ebeninum Bruguière, 1792
Lampania angulifera G. B. Sowerby II, 1866
Pyrazus baudini Montfort, 1810
Zeacumantus delicatus Laws, 1950
Pyrazus ebenius Bruguière, 1792
Cerithium ferruginosum Perry, 1811
Clava herculea Martyn, 1784
Pyrazus herculeus Hedley, 1906

Images

Pyrazus ebeninus - Hercules' Club Mud-creeper

Author: Jan Delsing

Pyrazus ebeninus - Hercules' Club Mud-creeper

Author: Jan Delsing

Pyrazus ebeninus - Hercules' Club Mud-creeper

Author: Macpherson & Gabriel

Taxon in country check-lists*

* List of countries might not be complete

Description

Shell large, dark brown, turreted. Spire elongate approximately two-thirds the length of shell, whorls of which are rounded but somewhat angulated at about the centre. Body-whorl more conspicuously nodosely angulated but angle nearer to suture. Sculptured with oblique, longitudinal ribs and numerous somewhat irregular concentric ridges. Interior brown, white towards the outer lip which is strong, sinuate posteriorly and margined with dark brown. Aperture almost circular, anterior canal short, rather broad; columella curved, inner lip reflected; operculum brown, flat. Size: 3 inches.
Macpherson, J.H. & Gabriel, C.J., 1962. Marine Molluscs of Victoria.

Interchangeable taxa

A remarkable, dark brown turreted shell, the only species of the genus in Victoria and easily recognized. The nearest ally is Velacumantus australis (Quoy & Gaimard), but immedaitely separated by its smaller size. This shell will aways possess a sentimental interest to Australian naturalists since it is one of the half dozen shells collected by Captain Cook at Botany Bay in April, 1770.
Macpherson, J.H. & Gabriel, C.J., 1962. Marine Molluscs of Victoria.

Interesting facts

A species which appears in countless numbers in many parts of New South Wales and Queensland, it inhabits estuaries of rivers, mud-flats and mangrove-swamps near the sea. Extremely gregarious and after receding tides their crossing and recrossing tracks form amazing patterns. It is not infrequent to see young oysters adhering to these Mud Whelks. The animal was used as an article of food by the aborigines, many examples appearing in kitchen middens. Toondah was the name given to the shell by aborigines of Moreton Bay, Queensland. It is recorded also from Tasmania. For many years known as Potamides ebeninus Bruguiere.
Macpherson, J.H. & Gabriel, C.J., 1962. Marine Molluscs of Victoria.
Author: Jan Delsing

Links and literature

EN Australian Faunal Directory [2f0c4d2b-3760-403a-8ad4-bdcc0c6c8042]

ABRS (2009-2019): Australian Faunal Directory [https://biodiversity.org.au/afd/home], Australian Biological Resources Study, Canberra [as Pyrazus ebeninus (Bruguiere, 1792)]
Data retrieved on: 16 February 2015
EN Galli C.: WMSDB - Wolrdwide Mollusc Species Data Base July 10, 2013 [http://www.bagniliggia.it/WMSD/WMSDhome....] [as Pyrazus ebeninus (Bruguiere, 1792)]
Data retrieved on: 23 November 2013
CZ Pfleger V. (1999): České názvy živočichů III. Měkkýši (Mollusca), Národní muzeum, (zoologické odd.), Praha, 108 pp. [as Pyrazus ebeninus (BRUGUIERE, 1792)]
Data retrieved on: 11 November 2013

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