Queen paua
A species of Abalone, Also known as Yellow-foot abalone Scientific name : Haliotis australis Genus : Abalone
Queen paua, A species of Abalone
Also known as:
Yellow-foot abalone
Botanical name: Haliotis australis
Genus: Abalone
Content
Description
Description
The size of the shell varies between 40 mm and 100 mm. "The thin, oval shell is quite convex. The distance of the apex from margin measures one-eighth to one-ninth the length of the shell. The sculpture consists of faint spirals and a close strong radiating corrugation. The 6 to 8 perforations are circular with elevated edges. The outlines are oval. The right margin is a little straighter. The back of the shell is convex, not carinated at the row of holes. The color pattern is light yellowish-brown, red on the spire, or light green flamed with red. The surface has almost obsolete spiral cords, and regular, close, radiating folds. Between the row of holes and the columellar margin there are no radiating folds, but several (generally three) strong spiral ribs. The spire is a little elevated and contains three whorls .Inside it is corrugated like the exterior, silvery with blue, green and red reflections, the latter predominating. The columellar plate is narrow. The corrugated exterior is quite constant and characteristic. Young specimens are more strongly ribbed spirally, and often have radiating stripes of red on a delicate green ground."
* Disclaimer: The judgment on toxicity and danger is for reference only. We DO NOT GUARANTEE any accuracy of such judgment. Therefore, you SHALL NOT rely on such judgment. It is IMPORTANT TO SEEK PROFESSIONAL ADVICE in advance when necessary.
Photo By mark2-nz , used under CC-BY-SA-4.0 /Cropped and compressed from original
Scientific Classification
Phylum
Molluscs Class
Snails and slugs Order
Lepetellida Family
Haliotis Genus
Abalone Species
Queen paua