Purpuradusta fimbriata (Gmelin, 1791)
Fringed
cowry, 7.6-15.75mm
Purpuradusta fimbriata
is one of the smaller cowries and lives in a wide range of atoll
habitats. In can be found under rocks at depths of about 3m or more during the
day on shallow lagoon subtidal reefs, or wandering about in seaward surge channel
ledges and caves at night. It can also be found on shipwrecks and lagoon pinnacles
as deep as 40m at least. Purpuradusta fimbriata is very similar to
and often difficult to distinguish from Purpuradusta
microdon and P. minoridens.
Until one is familiar with the differences, it is usually necessary to compare
specimens to determine which is which. Purpuradusta fimbriata has the
largest teeth of the three, becoming noticeably larger on the anterior columellar
side. All three species have three light transverse bands across the shell beneath
the speckling of brown flecks; in P. fimbriata, the central band is
more prominent than the other two, and it usually forms a darker but very irregular
middorsal blotch that is usually not present in the other two species, both
of which tend to have more regularly spaced dorsal spotting. Purpuradusta
fimbriata is distributed widely across the Indo-Pacific.









The middorsal band is often visible
through the orange to red mantle.

Created
23 September 2008
Updated 10 September 2011
Back to
cowry thumbnails or cowry
list
Kwajalein Underwater Home