Flamingo Tongue Snail (Cyphoma gibbosum), family Ovulidae, found off the coast of the SE United States and around the Caribbean
Feeds on the tissues of live soft corals.
Photograph by Xzavion Binns
seen from China
seen from United States
seen from Canada
seen from Canada

seen from Malaysia

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
seen from China

seen from United States

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Austria
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Türkiye

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
seen from United States
Flamingo Tongue Snail (Cyphoma gibbosum), family Ovulidae, found off the coast of the SE United States and around the Caribbean
Feeds on the tissues of live soft corals.
Photograph by Xzavion Binns
A flamingo tongue snail (Cyphoma gibbosum) on a purple sea fan in the Arcadin Islands, Haiti.
by Nick Hobgood
The beautiful flamingo tongue snail!
Cyphoma gibbosum
Cozumel, 2019
Flamingo tongue is a miniature snail feeds on soft corals. they poses bright markings which serves as a warning to the predator, called apos
Fingerprint Flamingo Tongue - Cyphoma signatum
What is shown in the photo is a beautiful and rare sea snail commonly known as Fingerprint Flamingo Tongue, belonging to the species Cyphoma signatum (Gastropoda - Ovulidae).
This snail is best known for the shell, rather than the animal itself. In fact, in the photo is not possible to observe the shell, since the mantle of the animal is completely covering it, displaying the beautiful pattern of yellow stripes bordered in brown that characterizes the species.
Cyphoma signatum is a trophic specialist on gorgonians Plexaurella spp. Unlike its generalist congener C. gibbous (the Flamingo Tongue snail), the Fingerprint Flamingo Tongue has received relatively little attention, in large part because it has been found too rarely for in-depth studies.
Rarity of C. signatum is likely to be a result, primarily, of habitat specificity, as the snail appears to be a trophic specialist on Plexaurella spp. and the frequency and location of that gorgonian genus must to some extent determine its predator's distribution [1].
Currently this species is known to occur in the Gulf of Mexico and the Caribbean Sea [2].
Photo credit: ©Arial Bauman | Cyphoma signatum in Copenhagen Wreck off Pompano Beach, Florida, US.
Source: Gerardo Aizpuru // PADI "Flamingo Tongue Snail / Cyphoma gibbosum Found this beauty hanging on a sea rod!"
Cyphomas on a Sea Fan. (AleksBartnickaPhotography)