Overview

Comprehensive Description

Description

 Trivia arctica has a small thickly calcified, glossy, egg shaped shell with a length of around 10 mm and width of 8 mm. The upper surface of the shell is reddish-brown while the lower surface is flattened and white. There are no spots on the shell, although the fleshy lobes of the mantle may bear spots. The shell aperture is long and narrow. Closely spaced, thickened ridges run around the width of the shell. When the animal is active the fleshy lobes of the mantle wrap around the shell so that it is almost totally covered. The mantle and the rest of the animal is pale in colour.The shell of Trivia arctica may be confused with that of Trivia monacha, which is slightly larger and has three dark spots down the long axis of the shell. Trivia arctica feeds on ascidians such as Botryllus schlosseri.
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Distribution

Distribution

More common in north of range
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Distribution

Belgian Exclusive Economic Zone, European waters (ERMS scope), Goote Bank, Greek Exclusive Economic Zone, Irish Exclusive economic Zone, Mediterranean Sea, North East Atlantic, Norwegian Exclusive Economic Zone, Portugese Exclusive Economic Zone, Spanish Exclusive Economic Zone, United Kingdom Exclusive Economic Zone, West Coast of Norway , Wimereux
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Source: World Register of Marine Species

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Ecology

Habitat

Depth range based on 115 specimens in 1 taxon.
Water temperature and chemistry ranges based on 24 samples.

Environmental ranges
  Depth range (m): 0 - 154.25
  Temperature range (°C): 7.477 - 12.348
  Nitrate (umol/L): 4.573 - 10.724
  Salinity (PPS): 35.008 - 35.363
  Oxygen (ml/l): 6.069 - 6.346
  Phosphate (umol/l): 0.333 - 0.807
  Silicate (umol/l): 2.311 - 5.173

Graphical representation

Depth range (m): 0 - 154.25

Temperature range (°C): 7.477 - 12.348

Nitrate (umol/L): 4.573 - 10.724

Salinity (PPS): 35.008 - 35.363

Oxygen (ml/l): 6.069 - 6.346

Phosphate (umol/l): 0.333 - 0.807

Silicate (umol/l): 2.311 - 5.173
 
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Habitat

 Found mainly in the sublittoral, on rocky coastlines and occasionally on the lower shore.
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Wikipedia

Trivia arctica

Trivia arctica, the northern cowrie, is a species of small sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Triviidae, the trivias.

This is a similar species to Trivia monacha and often occurs in the same areas.

The name Trivia means "common" and the word arctica means "of the arctic".

Contents

Distribution

This species occurs from the Mediterranean Sea to the Orkney islands north of Scotland and Norway. It is more common in the north.

In the British Isles the shells are known as "cowries", except in Orkney where they are called Groatie Buckies. In the Isles of Scilly the shell is referred to as a Guinea Money.[1]

Habitat

This species usually lives below low tide, in other words is sublittoral, but the empty shells of this species are often washed up onto beaches. In its northern range is found at depths of 100 m and in it s outhern range at depths up to 1000 m.

Description

The shell is glossy and lemon-shaped, with 20-30 transverse ridges. The upper part of the shell is a uniform very pale brown in color; there are no pigment spots present on the shell, but sometimes there are dots on the mantle of the animal.

The shell length is up to a maximum of about 10 mm and a width of about 8 mm.

The mantle is covered with many papillae. It has a light colour in deeper waters, but becomes darker between tide marks. The foot is light yellow or light orange. The admedian teeth of the radula have denticles. The penis is flat and broad.

The larvae have a light stomach and intestine. In the veliger stage they have a four-lobed velum with very long lobes.

Life habits

This snail lives among and feeds on compound ascidians, including Botryllus schlosseri. They often occur together with Trivia monacha. The breeding season is autumn, winter and early spring.

Note on differentiating the species

Both Trivia arctica and Trivia monacha were considered to be two forms of the same species until 1925, when A. J. Peile published a paper in the Proceedings of the Malacological Society differentiating the two. It is now known that the larvae of the two species are readily distinguishable.

The Linnaean name Trivia europea, now lapsed, referred to the supposed single species. Linnaeus himself mentioned two kinds: Cypraea europea and Cypraea anglica, but these terms were intended as a geographical distinction, and are not accepted as species names today.

References

  • Arkive.org : Trivia monacha
  • Marlin : Trivia monacha
  • Sabella.mba.ac.uk : The_British_species of Trivia : T. arctica_and T. monacha
  • Peile, A.J., 1925, The Differentiation as Species of the two forms of British Trivia, Proc. Malac. Soc. 1925, pp;. 195-198
  • P.J. Wayward & J.S. Ryland, Handbook of the Marine Fauna of North-West Europe, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 1996, ISBN 0-19-854055-8
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