Precious Wentletrap aka Staircase Shell (Epitonium scalare), family Epitoniidae, Exmouth Gulf, Western Australia
Marine snail.
photo by Aqua Research & Monitoring Services

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Precious Wentletrap aka Staircase Shell (Epitonium scalare), family Epitoniidae, Exmouth Gulf, Western Australia
Marine snail.
photo by Aqua Research & Monitoring Services
Painted Wentletrap Epitonium tinctum
Found in the Eastern Pacific from southern Alaska to Mexico. At high tide (twice a day) it feeds on the tips of anemone tentacles; then at low tide burrows into the sand. Living wentletraps contain a purple, toxic dye. The dye appears to be an anesthetic and it is thought that the snail may use it to relax the anemone tissues before feeding.
image by Cricket Raspet
Snat do snou snink about snis snail? Sne precious wentletrap @=:
@=: sney are sno sneautiful... i snove my snunderwater sniblings <3
Wentletraps
seashells
Wentletrap
Michael T. Young: Two Poems
A Gift of Dream It begins not in the trees exactlybut in what they do to the light,how their leaves weave it,a thread of spangles looped throughtheir branches, a nest of wonders,grouped where our eyes rest in awe,wedded with the other messengers of sky and possibility. Underthose wings we grow our own, eachjoy or sorrow drawn into featherand bone, a slumber that wakes in us,so free of the day’s…
#2804 - Epitonium scalare - Precious Wentletrap
Originally described as Turbo scalaris, and renamed and synonymised repeatedly over the centuries since. The family-level taxonomy has been even worse, if anything. Epitonium means 'turncock' and scalare's meanings include 'ladder' or 'staircase'. Wentletrap is from the Dutch for spiral staircase.
Found in subtidal sandy areas from Red Sea, the coasts of the Indian Ocean, the South West Pacific Ocean and among the Fiji Islands and Japan. Predators/parasites of sea anemones and corals, that they devour in small bits at a time.
A very pretty shell - the whorls are only connected to each other by the ribs every few millimeters. In the 1600s and 1700s they were considered a very rare shell and specimens changed hands for large sums of money. For example, about 1750, the Holy Roman Emperor Francis I paid 4,000 guilders for a specimen. Since the Dutch controlled the areas where the shells were thought to be found, they made sure to extract every duit they could from rich collectors.
Otago Museum, Dunedin, Aotearoa New Zealand