EMARGINULA STRIATULA(Plate IX.).—Fig. 26 is a whitish limpet, about an inch in length. The notch, or fissure, which is a peculiar feature of this shell, is seen on the end of the shell facing the Lima zelandica (Fig. 21).
CREPIDULA UNGUIFORMIS(Plate IX.).—Fig. 27 is a parasite shell, over an inch long, and found inside the lips of other shells. It is a thin, clear white shell, and is well named, from unguis, a finger-nail, which it much resembles. It varies in shape from nearly flat to semi-circular, according to the curve of the part of the shell on which it grows. The Crepidula shells are easily identified by the shelly internal appendage, or lamina, in which the body of the animal rests. From the peculiar effect of this lamina the Crepidula shell looks like a boat. This shell has recently been renamed Crepidula crepidula, a silly duplication, like Lima lima (Fig. 21). The Maori name for the Crepidula is the same as for a limpet, namely, Ngakahi or Ngakihi.
CREPIDULA ACULEATA(Plate IX.).—Fig. 28 (late Crepidula costata) is an oval-shaped white parasite shell, with purplish lines on the edge. It is a common shell in the North Island, and found on rocks and amongst roots of kelp, and on the outside of other shells, especially mussels. It varies in colour and shape, but is usually deeply ribbed, and attains a length of 1-1/2 inches.
There is another species of the Crepidula, viz., Monoxyla, similar in shape to the Crepidula aculeata, but white and smooth, and much smaller.
CALYPTRÆA MACULATA(Plate IX.).—Fig. 29 (late Galerus zelandicus) is a circular shell, found on rocks or kelp, and sometimes is attached to other shells, especially mussels. It attains a width of 1-1/2 inches, and is covered with a brown, hairy epidermis.
HIPPONYX AUSTRALIS(Plate IX.).—Fig. 30 is a limpet, which takes its name from its shape, being like a horse's foot. There was a colony of some hundreds of this Hipponyxunder a flat rock, resting on other rocks, on the ocean side of Mount Maunganui, at the entrance to Tauranga Harbour. Although there were thousands of other rocks round it, I never found the Hipponyx except under the one rock I have mentioned, and as far as I know it has never been found alive in any other part of New Zealand.
DENTALIUM NANUM(Plate IX.).—Fig. 31 is like a miniature white tusk of an elephant. It is about 1-1/2 inches long. It is really a limpet, which, having chosen mud and sand as its habitat, has adapted itself to its surroundings and become long and thin, instead of broad and flat, like the rock-loving limpet. It is found on the West Coast of Auckland Province, especially between Manukau and Raglan.
ACMÆA OCTORADIATA(Plate IX.).—Fig. 32 is one of the dozen Acmæa found in New Zealand. It is a very flat shell, and lives amongst rocks in the surf.
ACMÆA PILEOPSIS(Plate IX.).—Fig. 33 is a nearly round, smooth limpet, the outside being blackish, spotted with white, and the interior bluish, with a black margin. It is about an inch across.
Amongst the other ten Acmæa found in New Zealand the most noticeable is the Acmæa fragilis, a very delicate, thin, green shell, with narrow brown bands. There is a green ring in the interior of the shell. It is found under stones, and is about 1/2 inch across.
PATELLA RADIANS(Plate IX., Fig. 34), andPATELLA STELLIFERA(Fig. 35) are two representatives of the many species of beautiful limpets we have. The limpet family has not had the attention of our scientists which it merits. The shells vary so much that it is extremely difficult to classify them. In the attempt to do so, Patella radians has been subdivided into five sub-species, but even this division is not a success. We have few more beautiful or interesting shells than limpets. We have them of every shape, and from three inches in width down to microscopicspecimens. The limpet resides on one spot, but moves about with the rising tide in search of the vegetation on which it lives. This it mows down with its long scythe-like tongue, and, when satisfied, it returns to rest in its favourite spot. Limpets have the reputation of being indigestible, if not poisonous, but this is due to the head not being removed before the mollusc is eaten. If the head be removed carefully, the tongue, or radula, which is usually the length of the shell itself, will come with it. The 2000 or so fine teeth found on the average limpet's tongue will quite account for the belief that the fish is poisonous, as great irritation must be caused by these sharp little teeth. The Patella stellifera is usually found in caves or sheltered places amongst rocks exposed to the ocean swell. It is always covered with a coraline growth, usually of a pinkish tint, which growth has to be removed before the markings can be seen. Stars of all shapes, regular and irregular, will be found on the spire of the Patella stellifera. There is a reputation yet to be made by the man who can classify our New Zealand limpets. The Maori name for the limpet is Ngakihi, or Ngakahi, which name is also used for the Crepidula family.
PECTEN MEDIUS(Plate X.).—Fig. 1 (late Pecten laticostatus) is the well-known scallop found among the grass banks in harbours as well as in the open sea. The shells are sometimes five or even six inches across, and of all conceivable colours and mixtures of colours. The valve shown in the plate is the flat valve, which looks like a fan. The other valve, which is rounded, makes a good substitute for a scoop. This Pecten, or scallop, is the most delicate of our edible shellfish, but is never seen in our markets. The animal moves by opening its shell, slowly swallowing a large quantity of water, and in a rapid manner ejecting it, thereby pushing the shell backwards. The Maori name is Tipa.
PECTEN CONVEXUS(Plate X.).—Fig. 2 is a much smaller shell than No. 1, and quite as brilliantly coloured. The valves are nearly equal in shape. It is found amongst rocks, but is usually dredged in comparatively shallow water.
PECTEN ZELANDIÆ(Plate X.).—Fig. 3 is a still smaller shell, and the most brilliantly coloured of our Pecten family. The valves are similar in shape, and covered with short spikes. It has only the one ear, or lug, at the hinge end, but sometimes a portion of the ear is found on the other side. This shell lives amongst rocks, or in sponges, or on the roots of kelp, in sheltered or fairly sheltered portions of open beaches. It is found attached to the rocks by a byssus, or beard.
PINNA ZELANDICA(Plate X.).—Fig. 4 is generally known as the Horse Mussel. It is usually found amongst the grass, about low water mark, on sandy beaches, especially those containing a proportion of mud. The natives call it Hururoa or Kupa, and in some places it is a staple article of diet with them. This horse mussel is found in certain spots in great numbers, and is then useless for a cabinet. The collector should look for odd scattered specimens. As a rule, only about half an inch of the shell will be found protruding above the beach, in very shallow water, but in deep water more of the shell will protrude.
MYTILUS LATUS(Plate X.).—Fig. 5 is the ordinary mussel, with a green epidermis, and the part near the hinge is usually eroded, as shown in the plate. It grows to a considerable size in New Zealand, being sometimes 8 inches in length, and is found in enormous quantities in favoured localities on rocks or attached by its beard in clusters to old cockle and other shells on the banks. About twenty years ago hundreds of acres of banks between the town of Tauranga and the sea were in one season colonised by mussel spawn, and although the mussel was before that date a rare thing on these banks, yet after the colonisation the banks were simply a mass of mussels, and the water, being only from one to two fathoms deep at low spring tide, they were easily procurable. On the other hand, banks near Kati Kati Heads, that were covered a few years ago, are now without mussels. This is probably due to some disease breaking out through overcrowding. The Mytilus edulis (not shown on plate) is a purplish shell, of similar shape and habits to the above, but much smaller in size. The Maori name for a mussel is Kuku or Porope or Tore-tore or Kutai, and for the smaller mussels Kukupara or Purewa or Toriwai.
MYTILUS MAGELLANICUS(Plate X.).—Fig. 6 is a bluish mussel, with prominent ribs, as shown in the plate. The interior is white, and the shell is found up to three inches in length.
VOLSELLA AUSTRALIS(Plate X.).—Fig. 7 (late Modiola australis) is a rough-looking, uneven shell, of a pale chestnut colour. It usually has a hairy-looking growth near the edge, as shown in the plate. It is found up to four inches in length.
There are two other of the Volsella family in New Zealand, neither of which are illustrated. The Volsella fluviatilis, a shiny, black mussel, shaped like the Edulis, and about 1-1/2 inches long, found in brackish water, is the most common. The inside is bluish-white, and purplish round the margin.
OSTREA ANGASI(Plate X.).—Fig. 8 is a mud oyster, of which those dredged at Stewart's Island are the largest we have. Fine specimens were found in Ohiwa Harbour prior to the Tarawera eruption of 1886, but the deposit from that eruption appears for the time being to have destroyed them. There must be some large banks of this oyster in the Bay of Plenty, judging by the number of dead shells washed up in places; but, although I many times used the dredge while in Tauranga, I never had the good fortune to find one of the banks. Cartloads of the shells were at times washed up on the beach between the town of Tauranga and the entrance to the harbour.
The best known oyster in New Zealand is the Auckland rock oyster, the Ostrea glomerata (not shown in the plate), which is familiar to all who visit the seashore in the North. The Maori name for the rock oyster is Tio, and for the mud oyster Tiopara.
PLACUNANOMIA ZELANDICA(Plate X.).—Fig. 9 is of the family known in England as the pepper and salt oyster. The lower valve is flat and has the large oval opening, shown in the plate, through which the foot of the animal protrudes and holds the shell on to the rock. The shell is thin and fragile, and is found in both Islands. Another shell of the same family, the Anomia walteri (not shown on plate), is found at the Bay of Islands, and is usually coloured bright yellow or orange.
MUREX RAMOSUS, the last figure, is the latest addition to our New Zealand marine shells, and is described with the others of the Murex family on Plate II., and on page 16.
PLATE I.PLATE I.
PageArgonauta nodosa14Spirula peroni15
PLATE II.PLATE II.
Page1—Murex zelandicus152—Murex octogonus163—Murex eos164—Trophon stangeri165—Trophon ambiguus166—Trophon cheesemani177—Ancilla australis178 and 9—Purpura succincta1710—Purpura scobina1711—Purpura haustrum1712—Scaphella pacifica1813—Scaphella gracilis1814—Mitra melaniana18
PLATE III.PLATE III.
PageDolium variegatum18Lotorium rubicundum19
PLATE IV.PLATE IV.
Page1—Siphonalia dilatata192—Siphonalia mandarina193—Siphonalia nodosa194—Struthiolaria papulosa195—Struthiolaria vermis206—Euthria lineata207—Cominella lurida218—Cominella huttoni219—Euthria flavescens2010—Euthria vittata2011—Cominella maculata2112—Cominella testudinea2113—Cominella virgata2214—Cominella nassoides22
PLATE VPLATE V
Page1—Lotorium olearium222—Apollo argus223—Apollo australasia224—Lotorium spengleri225—Semi-cassis pyrum236—Semi-cassis labiata237—Lotorium cornutum23
PLATE VI.PLATE VI.
Page1—Calliostoma tigris232—Calliostoma selectum243—Calliostoma pellucidum244—Calliostoma punctulatum245—Trochus viridis246—Trochus tiaratus247—Ethalia zelandica258—Natica zelandica259—Nerita nigra2510—Amphibola crenata2611—Monodonta subrostrata2612—Monodonta aethiops2613—Monodonta nigerrima2614—Monodonta lugubris2615—Turbo granosus2616 and 17—Turbo helicinus2718—Astralium sulcatum2719—Astralium heliotropium27
PLATE VII.PLATE VII.
Page1—Janthina exigua282—Janthina fragilis283—Cantharidus iris284—Taron dubius295—Litorina cincta296—Litorina mauritiana297—Cantharidus tenebrosus288—Cantharidus purpuratus289—Cantharidus fasciatus2910—Daphnella lymneiformis2911 & 12—Surcula novae-zelandiæ2913—Potamides sub-carinatus3014—Solidula alba3015 & 16—Surcula cheesemani3017—Scalaria zelebori3018—Scalaria tenella3019—Potamides bicarinatus3020—Terebra tristis3021—Tenagodes weldii3022—Trophon duodecimus3023—Trophon plebeius3124—Tricotropis inornata3125—Marinula filholi3126—Tralia australis3127—Turritella vittata3128—Turritella rosea3129—Trivia australis3130—Cylichna striata3131—Haminea zelandia3232—Bulla quoyi32
PLATE VIII.PLATE VIII.
Page1—Barnea similis322—Pholadidea tridens323—Panopea zelandica324—Cochlodesma angasi325—Corbula zelandica336—Saxicava arctica337—Myodora striata338—Myodora boltoni339—Mactra discors3310—Mactra æquilatera3311—Standella ovata3312—Standella elongata3413—Resania lanceolata3414—Zenatia acinaces3415—Psammobia stangeri3416—Solenotellina nitida3417—Psammobia lineolata3418—Solenotellina spenceri3419—Tellina glabrella3520—Tellina disculus3521—Tellina alba3522—Tellina strangei3523—Mesodesma ventricosa3524—Atactodea subtriangulata3625—Mesodesma novæ-zelandiæ3626—Chione costata3627—Chione stutchburyi3628—Chione oblonga3629—Anaitis yatei37
PLATE IX.PLATE IX.
Page1—Haliotis iris372—Haliotis rugoso-plicata373—Glycymeris laticostata374—Glycymeris striatularis375—Cardita aviculina386—Rhynchonella nigricans387—Terebratella sanguinea388—Lithophago truncata389—Venerupis reflexa3910—Venerupis elegans3911—Divaricella cumingi3912—Venericardia australis3913—Chione crassa3914—Tapes intermedia3915—Dosinia australis4016—Dosinia subrosea4017—Barbatia decussata4018—Solenomya parkinsoni4019—Modiolaria impacta4020—Lima bullata4121—Lima zelandica4122—Sub-emarginula intermedia4123—Scutum ambiguum4124—Siphonaria obliquata4125—Siphonaria australis4126—Emarginula striatula4227—Crepidula unguiformis4228—Crepidula aculeata4229—Calyptræa maculata4230—Hipponyx australis4231—Dentalium nanum4332—Acmæa octoradiata4333—Acmæa pileopsis4334—Patella radians4335—Patella stellifera43
PLATE X.PLATE X.
Page1—Pecten medius442—Pecten convexus443—Pecten zelandiæ454—Pinna zelandica455—Mytilus latus456—Mytilus magellanicus467—Volsella australis468—Ostrea angasi469—Placunanomia zelandica4610—Murex ramosus46