Lyncina argus (Linnaeus, 1758)
Eyed
cowry, 49-100mm
Lyncina argus has an
unmistakable pattern. These cowries live in a variety of locations throughout
the atoll, but are most often found on lagoon pinnacles (such as R-Buoy and
Marita Shoals), on the oceanside in surge channel caves and on the slope, and
along some interisland reefs such as that between Bigej and Meck Islands. By
day the shells live beneath large dead coral rocks, buried several layers down
in dead table coral rubble, or well back in dark caves and crevices. At night,
they graze on walls and ceilings of small caves or rocky surfaces. We have seen
them as shallow as about 5m and as deep as at least 40m. Living animals are
infrequently seen, but empty shells in good condition can be found on surge
channel floors and along the edge of interisland reefs. Oceanside specimens
average larger than those from lagoon pinnacles, and the ones along Bigej-Meck
reef seem to be the smallest of all. The name argus refers to the circular
“eyes” covering the shell. This species ranges across the Indo-Pacific
with the exception of Hawaii and Eastern Australia.






The two shots below show juvenile
bulla stages, the first with the mantle retracted and the second with it nearly
fully extended.


Created
1 April 2008
Updated 8 October 2009
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