Comprehensive Description
provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
This limpet has a moderately high apex about 1/3 from the front of the shell. The outside is grayish or brownish black without major ribs, often partly eroded, while the inside is black. Sometimes a light band is found inside the shell running around the aperture near the margin. The external shell is mostly smooth but fine radial ridges can sometimes be seen at the margin. Usually found living on the black turban snail Chlorostoma funebralis but sometimes on Mytilus californianus. Length up to about 1cm and height to 8 mm.
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Habitat
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Usually found on the black turban snail Chlorostoma funebralis
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Distribution
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Geographical Range: Southern Alaska to Islas de Revillagigedo, northern Mexico
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Habitat
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Depth Range: Mostly intertidal
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Look Alikes
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How to Distinguish from Similar Species: Most other dark, smooth limpets grow larger and do not usually live on black turban snails.
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Comprehensive Description
provided by Invertebrates of the Salish Sea
Biology/Natural History: As with other limpets, this species grazes on microalgae on the substrate. The species may move from one host to another, probably when the hosts are aggregated together at low tide. It avoids shells that are not occupied, and seems to prefer shells occupied by snails to those occupied by hermit crabs. Washing shells with alcohol or distilled water reduce the limpet's attraction to them. Spawning is in spring and fall. Eggs and sperm are released into the water. Larvae have a planktonic phase and develop a coiled shell before settling and developing a cap-shaped shell. In California this limpet sometimes is found on the shell of the speckled turban, Tegula gallinea.
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Lottia asmi
provided by wikipedia EN
Lottia asmi, commonly known as the black limpet,[2] is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Lottiidae. It is found in shallow water in the eastern Pacific Ocean, usually in the intertidal zone.
Description
This small limpet grows to a length of 10 mm (0.4 in) and a height of 8 mm (0.3 in), the apex being closer to the anterior end. The exterior is smooth and often rather worn, but fine sculptured radial ridges are sometimes visible near the margin. The exterior is brownish- or greyish-black, and the interior is black, sometimes with a pale band near the margin.[2]
Distribution and habitat
Lottia asmi is native to the northeastern Pacific Ocean, its range extending from southern Alaska to the Revillagigedo Islands in Mexico. It is usually found in the intertidal zone living on the shell of the black turban snail (Tegula funebralis). It occasionally inhabits the shell of the California mussel (Mytilus californianus) or the speckled turban (Tegula gallina),[2] or lives directly on a rock substrate, and on one occasion on a sponge. It favours living mollusc shells but has been found on shells occupied by hermit crabs.[3]
Ecology
L. asmi is a herbivore and grazes on the microalgae growing on the shell of its host. It may change from one host shell to another at low tide, when the turban shells tend to aggregate.[2] At Pigeon Point, California, juveniles reach maturity at about eight months old. Reproduction is intermittent throughout the year, with possible spawning events in March and another in October as well as a prolonged spawning period in mid-summer. The larvae pass through a planktonic phase with a coiled shell before settling, undergoing metamorphosis and adopting the adult, conical shape. This is a fast growing species with a high reproductive output.[3]
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Lottia asmi: Brief Summary
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Lottia asmi, commonly known as the black limpet, is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Lottiidae. It is found in shallow water in the eastern Pacific Ocean, usually in the intertidal zone.
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