Hydatina amplustre from Reunion Island
November 14, 2006
From: Hugues Flodrops
Dear Bill,
Here are three photos of Hydatina amplustre, all of the same individual. I saw another one three years ago at the same place. I like this cephalaspid because the shell with pink and white spiral is very beautiful. On the lower left photo, are the two black points the eyes?
Locality: Etang-Salé Lagoon, 80 cm, Reunion Island, Indian Ocean, 13 November 2006. Length: 20 mm. Photographer: Hugues Flodrops.
It seems that the animal can't be fully retracted into the shell, why?
Thanks for your comments.
Best regards.
Hugues.
hugues.flodrops@wanadoo.fr
Flodrops, H, 2006 (Nov 14) Hydatina amplustre from Reunion Island. [Message in] Sea Slug Forum. Australian Museum, Sydney. Available from http://www.seaslugforum.net/find/18346
Dear Hugues,
Thanks for these photos. I guess that apart from a few acteonids, such as Acteon eloiseae, this is probably the only species of sea slug with a shell that is more beautiful and colourful than the animal.
Your photos are particularly valuable because they show how the front of the head shield is developed into a pair of tentacles on each side. Hydatina physis has a similar arrangement but it is more difficult to see because the 'tentacles' are much larger and lobe-like. Yes the two black spots are the eyes.
All species of Hydatina can retract back into their shell but they seldom do. The rely on distasteful acid glands in their skin and burrowing in the sand to protect them. There is also a mechanical reason for their poor ability to retract back into the shell. Most snails have a solid shell and a central heavily calcified central 'pole' we call the columella around which the shell, and animal, spirals. There is a huge columella muscle which attaches the animal to the shell and can quickly pull the animal back inside when necessary. In Hydatina, in which the shell is becoming reduced in importance, the columella has become very reduced, as has the associated columellar muscle.
Best wishes,
Bill Rudman
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