134 



EAST COAST MARINE SHELLS 



two commonest Cones in the Antilles, 

 PI. 51, Fig. 17 

 Florida Keys and West Indies 



CONUS DAUCUS Bruguiere. Shell orange or 

 carrot color, indistinctly banded, turbi- 

 nate in form with a low spire; spiral sculp- 

 ture present. 



Fossil specimens have been col- 

 lected in the Caloosahatchee beds of Flori- 

 da and It possibly may still be living near 

 the Florida Keys. Length 1.5-2 inches. 



PI. 5S, Fig. 8 



West Indies 



CONUS NEBULOSUS Solander. Cloudy Cone. 

 Shell solid, turbinated; zones of brownish 

 color crossed by fine spiral lines of 

 slightly darker shade, these lines becom- 

 ing dots or dashes of white and dark below, 

 toward the base becoming granular; spotted 

 with white irregularly upon surface; blunt- 

 ly crowned with short tubercles at the 

 shoulder; interior mostly whitish. 



This very beautiful shell is appar- 

 ently unrecorded from the United States. 

 Several specimens collected upon the Flori- 

 da beaches during the winter of 1935-1936 

 have been called to the writer's attention. 

 The fine shell illustrated was secured at 

 Fort Lauderdale by W. A. Royce. Another 

 worn specimen has been reported by Dr. B. 

 R. Bales from Pelican Shoals, about eight- 

 een miles northeast of Key West. Tryon 

 reports the species as occurring in the 

 West Indies and adjacent coasts of North 

 and South America, 



PI, 51, Fig, 21 



Palm Beach County, Florida to the 



West Indies 



Family Turridae (Turrltldae ) 



Shell fusiform, 

 spire elevated, canal 

 long and straight; slit 

 on outer lip, near su- 

 ture, an opening for ex- 

 cretions and shown in 

 Fig. 51. 



Animal with sinus 

 upon right margin and 

 corresponding with slit 

 in shell. A poison 

 gland is often present 

 and used In connection 

 with the radula. The 



Fig. 51 

 Slit of Turria 



presence of this gland, together with the 

 notch in the shell, indicate affinity with 

 the Conidae. 



The species are extremely numerous, 

 also difficult to define and classify. In- 

 dividuals are usually few in numbers. Many 

 have been described from solitary examples 

 and a considerable number inadequately il- 

 lustrated, if at all. 



GENUS TURRIS Roeding 1798, Pleurotoma 

 Lamarck 1799 (TOWER SHELLS) 



TURRIS VIRGO Wood (T. albida Perry). Color 

 whitish; about five prominent raised spiral 

 ridges which are most conspicuous near the 

 periphery; additional, similar, closer ones 

 below; pairs of finer ridges between some 

 of the larger ones; suture well Impressed; 

 canal long, narrow. Length 2.5-3.5 inches. 

 Depth range 26-150 fathoms. 



A single example, occupied by a 

 hermit-cr«b, was taken in Lake Worth, Flor- 

 ida. In the West Indies it lives in com- 

 paratively shallow water. 



PI. 52, Fig, 15 



Palm Beach County, Florida; Gulf of 



Mexico; Antilles 



SUBGENUS ANCISTROSYRINX 



A very elegant group of deep-water 

 shells which also occur in the Eocene fos- 

 sil beds at Jackson, Mississippi and also 

 probably in Europe. 



ANCISTROSYRINX ELEGANS Dall. In this shell 

 the anterior portion of the whorls is cov- 

 ered with granulose spirals, one more prom- 

 inent than the rest in front of which the 

 suture coils; sinus comparatively short, 

 banded outside by an elevated keel. The 

 spines are very small and curved toward the 

 apex; nucleus brownish, glassy and with one 

 keel. Length 27 mm. 



PI. S8, Fig. 28 



Florida Reefs; off Havana, 805 fath- 

 oms 



GENUS CYMATOSYRINX Dall 1889, Drillia 

 of Authors in Part 



CYMATOSYRINX FURCATA Reeve. Shell faintly 

 channelled above periphery; ribs usually 

 six in number, rounded, not strong, not in- 

 terrupted at periphery but extending to su- 

 ture; peculiar hump or varix back of body 



