Aporrhais occidentalis Beck, 1836
American pelicanfoot
Aporrhais occidentalis
photo by Harvey-Clark, Chris

Family:  Aporrhaidae ()
Max. size:  7 cm DL (male/unsexed)
Environment:  benthic; marine; depth range 4 - 1829 m
Distribution:  Arctic and North America.
Diagnosis:  Shell: high conical spire, rather thick and solid, with swollen whorls and very impressed sutures; outer lip is broadened and forms a large unfingered expansion; both outer and columellar lips are strongly thickened; sculpture consists of a score of strong well-spaced axial ribs, usually curving, also a spiral ornament of thin, deeply incised grooves, especially marked on the body whorl; whitish cream or grayish in color; the operculum is very small, horny and ellipsoidal, with smooth edges. Body: similar to the strombids, especially in the structure of the long and narrow foot with a smaller anterior lobe and a large posterior one that bears the operculum and enables the mollusk to leap; eyes are not pedunculated, but are at the base of the tentacles; mantle cavity contains only one gill, the osphradium and in males, the copulatory organ; radula is taenioglossan.
Biology: 
IUCN Red List Status: Not Evaluated (N.E.) Ref. 123251)
Threat to humans: 
Country info:   
 

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