identifier	taxonID	type	CVterm	format	language	title	description	additionalInformationURL	UsageTerms	rights	Owner	contributor	creator	bibliographicCitation
03A287BEFFBDA51DCFBAC3DFFED4A37F.text	03A287BEFFBDA51DCFBAC3DFFED4A37F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus biodiversity	<div><p>Importance of Conus biodiversity study</p><p>The cone shells have fascinated biologists from time immemorial. Recently, these snails captivated a new set of admirers among biochemists and pharmacologists with their unique venoms. The venom of some species is powerful enough to kill a human being (Rumphius 1705). The crude venom of cone snails is a cocktail of different peptides termed as ‘conotoxins’ (Olivera et al. 1985, 1991; Olivera &amp; Cruz 2001). The venom of each species of Conus has estimated to comprise between 100–200 peptide components (Myers et al. 1993; Alonso et al. 2003; Olivera 2006). Conotoxins have proved to be a valuable probe in physiological and pharmacological studies of ion channels and other receptors (Olivera &amp; Teichert 2007). To date, only 100 out of a potential 50,000 toxins have been extracted and analysed (Wright et al. 2002). Since a single species of Conus can yield 100–200 peptides with potential therapeutic uses, it is hoped that discovery of new species of cone snails would add to the knowledge of extant species as well as to the chemical diversity of pharmacologically active peptides.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFBDA51DCFBAC3DFFED4A37F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFB2A509CFBAC44AFD99A75C.text	03A287BEFFB2A509CFBAC44AFD99A75C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus achatinus Gmelin 1791	<div><p>1. Conus achatinus Gmelin, 1791 (Figure 2)</p><p>Conus achatinus Gmelin, 1791: 3388, no. 25 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 142, fig. 1317 (74 x 42 mm) (Kohn 1966); "Oceano americano", corrected to " Java " (Coomans et al. 1979b)).</p><p>Conus achatinus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 671–673, no. 66 (lectotype, MHNG (68.5 x 40.5 mm) (Kohn 1968); "Océan asiatique").</p><p>Conus ranunculus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 671, no. 65 (holotype, MHNG (45 x 23 mm) (Kohn 1968); "Océan Amériquain").</p><p>Cucullus ventricosus Röding, 1798: 49, no. 623/114.</p><p>Conus achatinus var. infumata Dautzenberg, 1937: 12 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 142, fig. 1320 (60 x 31 mm) (Walls 1979)).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 101, 5 specimens, SL 35–65 mm; SW 17–32 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately solid, outline convex. Aperture wider at base than near shoulder. Spire of moderate height. Colour of body whorl olive or orange red to blackish brown, clouded with scattered white to dull yellowish flammules and blotches; broad band at centre with similar pattern. Spiral uniform thin lines of dark brown interrupted by white dots and dashes run from shoulder to base. Aperture bluish white; exterior dark colour pattern visible as a band along interior border of lip. Periostracum brown and opaque. End of siphon dark brown, proboscis deep orange to red.</p><p>Distribution. Melvill &amp; Abercrombie (1893) first reported C. achatinus from India as ‘ C. monachus Linnaeus var. achatinus Chemnitz’. C. achatinus was reported to be widely distributed along northwest coast from Okha southward to Goa (Melvill &amp; Abercrombie 1893; Abercrombie 1893; Melvill &amp; Standen 1901; Hornell &amp; Tomlin 1951; Subrahmanyam et al. 1952; Kohn 1978). Ray (1949) reported two specimens from the east coast.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 5–20 m and by diving in 10 m. Fifty-eight specimens from Colaba, Bombay were collected by hand at low tide .</p><p>Remarks. In Colaba, Bombay (18 0 53’N 72 0 48’E), C. achatinus (piscivore) occurs together with C. hyaena (vermivore) on the upper intertidal region of the west coast, but it occurs only subtidally on the east coast.</p><p>Four types of shell colour patterns were observed among C. achatinus found on the west coast (Figure 62A, B, C &amp; D) whereas only one type was observed in the east (Figure 2). The size range was similar between both coast specimens.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFB2A509CFBAC44AFD99A75C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA9A509CFBAC19FFC1CA331.text	03A287BEFFA9A509CFBAC19FFC1CA331.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus aculeiformis Reeve 1844	<div><p>2. Conus aculeiformis Reeve, 1844 (Figure 3)</p><p>Conus aculeiformi s Reeve, 1844: pl. 44, no. 240b (lectotype, BMNH 196168 (38 x 15 mm) (Walls 1979); " Cagayan, island of Mindanao, Philippines ") .</p><p>Conus (Asperi) delicates Schepman, 1913: 392– 393, pl. 25, fig. 3 (holotype, ZMA (18.5 x 6 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Madura-bay").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 102, 3 specimens, SL 35–41 mm; SW 11–15 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small and light. Body whorl narrowly conical, elongated anteriorly, outline almost straight. Shoulder angulate with a deep exhalent notch. Spire of moderate height, sharply pointed and concave. Body whorl with widely spaced, axially striate spiral grooves separating very flat ribbons and extending from base to shoulder. Aperture long, narrow and slightly wider anteriorly, outer lip very thin and fragile, posteriorly sloping strongly below level of shoulder. Ground colour cream. Body whorl with spiral rows of brown squarish to rectangular spots on ribbons, often fused into an interrupted spiral band on each side of the centre. Aperture pale brown.</p><p>Distribution. There have been no records in the literature on the distribution of this species in India. However, specimens from Madras (at AMNH) and Tranquebar (at ZMUC) were collected by the Galathea expedition (Kohn 1978) .</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Madras by trawling in 20–40 m and at Cuddalore from the trash discard (Table 6).</p><p>Remarks. The present shell collected from Cuddalore is larger (41 mm) than the maximum length (38 mm) of this species previously reported by Röckel et al. (1995).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA9A509CFBAC19FFC1CA331	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA9A508CFBAC532FB4DA6F9.text	03A287BEFFA9A508CFBAC532FB4DA6F9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus acutangulus Lamarck 1810	<div><p>3. Conus acutangulus Lamarck, 1810 (Figure 4)</p><p>Conus acutangulus Lamarck, 1810: 286, no. 121 (neotype, MNHN (27 x 12.5 mm) (Kohn 1981); "Mer des Grandes</p><p>Indes"). Conus turriculatus Sowerby II, 1866: pl. 27 (288), figs. 643, 644 (type, BMNH (22 x 10.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995)). Conus gemmulatus Sowerby III, 1870: 257, pl. 22, fig. 8 (Holotype, BMNH (13 x 6 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " China</p><p>Seas").</p><p>Materials examined: MBMCS 103, 2 specimens, SL 32–38 mm; SW 15–17 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium-sized, moderately solid. Body whorl conical, sides nearly straight with broad raised ribs of fairly uniform width separated by narrow deep grooves. Ground colour white. Body whorl light brown with scattered blotches of ground colour at shoulder and centre. Shoulder carinate. Spire high, marked by distantly spaced brown spots and streaks. Aperture narrow, interior pale brown; outer lip thin and fragile.</p><p>Distribution. Melvill &amp; Standen (1901) and Kohn (1978) reported specimens of C. acutangulus from Bombay and Malabar Coast. Kohn (1978) reported specimens (in ZSI) from Coromandel Coast and Vizhagapattinam on the east coast.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Nagapattinam and Palayar (Table 6) by trawling in 50 m and 55 m.</p><p>Remarks. The specimen collected from Nagapattinam is larger (38 mm) than the previous size (30 mm) reported by Röckel et al. (1995). This species appears to be rare along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA9A508CFBAC532FB4DA6F9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA8A508CFBAC167FDDDA0A7.text	03A287BEFFA8A508CFBAC167FDDDA0A7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus amadis Gmelin 1791	<div><p>4. Conus amadis Gmelin, 1791 (Figure 5)</p><p>Conus amadis Gmelin, 1791: 3388, no. 32 (lectotype, ZMUC (78 x 41 mm) (Kohn 1966); "Rameswaram, India ").</p><p>Conus amadis Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 689–690, no. 78 (lectotype, MHNG (85 x 46 mm) (Kohn 1968); "aux isles de Java et de Borneo ").</p><p>Cucullus venustus Röding, 1798: 47, no. 599.</p><p>Conus amadis var. aurantia “Lamarck” Dautzenberg, 1937: 14–15 (representation of lectotype, Knorr 1772: pl. 5, fig. 3 (71 x 33 mm) (Coomans et al. 1981); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus amadis var. castaneofasciata “Sowerby” Dautzenberg, 1937: 15 (lectotype, MHNG (80 x 40.5 mm) (Coomans et al. 1983); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus subacutus Fenaux, 1942: 4, fig. 10 (" Madagascar ").</p><p>Conus arbonatalis da Motta, 1978: 5, 7 (holotype, MHNG (64 x 30 mm) (Rockel et al. 1995); "off the coastal waters arching from Ranong South West Thailand toward Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal").</p><p>Conus (Leptoconus) lozeti Richard, 1980: 91–95 (holotype, MNHN (56 x 30 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Fort-Dauphin au sud-est de Madagascar ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 104, 291 specimens, SL 35–112 mm; SW 17–54 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, solid. Body whorl broadly conical, glossy and thinner at aperture lip. Shoulder angulate to carinate. Spire of moderate height, sometimes shorter; apex sharply pointed, strong spiral ridge runs along spire. Body whorl with distinct to obsolete spiral grooves from base to centre or beyond, separated by ribs at base and ribbons above. Ground colour white. Body whorl with yellow to dark brown variable, irregular, zig-zag markings. Two transverse yellowish to dark brown bands interrupted by white dots or small tents either side of centre. Spire marked with yellow to dark brown spots. Aperture bluishwhite, translucent and uniformly wide. End of siphon is yellow to dark brown with a black band behind anterior edge.</p><p>Distribution. Thurston (1890) first reported C. amadis from Rameswaram. Subsequent records are from Pamban (Thurston 1895; Satyamurti 1952), Krusadai Island ([Chennappayya] 1927, as ‘ C. acuminatus ’), Mandapam (Sundaram 1969), Madras (Melvill &amp; Standen 1898; Crichton 1940, 1941; Gravely 1942; Satyamurti 1952) and PortoNovo (Kohn 1978). Kohn (1978) has reported museum specimens from Tuticorin (at BMNH) and Tranqebar (at ZMUC).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from all the stations selected for this study (except Rameswaram and Vellapatti) by trawling in 10–30 m (Table 6).</p><p>Remarks. Conus amadis was found to be a common species. The colour pattern on the body whorl varied widely within populations and among stations (Figure 62E). Shells of many specimens from the Gulf of Mannar and Southern regions were infested with sessile barnacle Balanus amphitrite Darwin (Figure 62F) and Balanus variegatus Darwin (Figure 62G). Conus amadis was frequently collected at Periyakuppam when fishing for seashells after monsoons.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA8A508CFBAC167FDDDA0A7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA8A50BCFBAC6B2FE44A321.text	03A287BEFFA8A50BCFBAC6B2FE44A321.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus araneosus	<div><p>5. Conus araneosus [Lightfoot], 1786 (Figure 6)</p><p>Conus araneosus [Lightfoot], 1786: 106, no. 2328 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 61, fig. 676 (64 x 39 mm) (Kohn 1964); " China, Coromandel").</p><p>Conus arachanoides Gmelin, 1791: 3388, no. 34 (representation of lectotype, Knorr 1772: pl. 4, fig. 4 (49 x 27 mm) (Kohn 1966); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus nicobaricus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 612, no. 7 (representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 318, fig. 9 (63 x 36 mm); "des grandes Indes").</p><p>Conus araneosus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 612–613, no. 8 (lectotype, MHNG (94 x 55 mm) ( Kohn 1968); "isles Moluques ").</p><p>Conus reticulatus Perry, 1811: pl. 24, no. 2 (representation of holotype, Perry 1811: pl. 24, no. 2 (61 x 37 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus monstrosus “Chemnitz ” Küster, 1838: 77, pl. 12, figs. 5, 6 (representation of holotype, Küster 1838: pl. 12, fig. 6 (50 x 32 mm); "Indischer Ozean").</p><p>Conus peplum Sowerby II, 1857: 3, no. 11 (" Red Sea ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 105, 122 specimens, SL 24–105 mm; SW 15–63 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large, solid to heavy with a high gloss. Body whorl conical. Shoulder broad, faintly canaliculated, angulate, weakly to strongly tuberculate. Outline straight to slightly convex. Spire of low to moderate height; outline straight. Spiral whorls strongly tuberculate. Body whorl with weak spiral ribs above base. Aperture moderately wide; outer lip thick, sharp, straight.</p><p>Ground colour white, entire shell tinged with violet. Body whorl with fine network of dark brown reddish brown lines outlining small white tents, with two dark brown or black spiral bands on each side of the centre. Spire low. Aperture white to pale violet, interior deep yellow.</p><p>Distribution. Conus araneosus was reported from the Coromandel Coast ([Lightfoot] 1786). Mawe (1823) recorded it from Tranquebar (as ‘ C. arachanoideus ’). Subsequent records were made from Pamban (Satyamurti 1952; Sundaram 1969), Pamban, Mandapam and Vedhalai (Natarajan 1957) and Mandapam and Tuticorin (Kohn 1978). Museum specimens (in ANSP) from Hare Island were reported by Kohn (1978).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Gulf of Mannar (Table 6) by trawling in 10–30 m and diving in 5–10 m on limestone and sandy substrates .</p><p>Remarks. In this survey, we have not observed any specimens of C. araneosus from the Northern and Palk Bay regions. Thus, the northward extension of this species from Gulf of Mannar remains to be verified. The high abundance of this species compared to other gastropods at Oolakuda, Rameswaram, has earned a name ‘Oolakuda vallapoo’ (also see Vallapoo in Introduction) by the local fishermen. Three albino specimens were collected from Tuticorin and their characteristic radular teeth confirmed identification. This species is usually heavily infested with the sessile barnacle Balanus amaryllis Darwin (Figure 62H). One malformed specimen was collected from Vellapatti (Figure 62I) with elevated stepped spire, running one-fourth of the total shell length (102 mm).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA8A50BCFBAC6B2FE44A321	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFABA50ACFBAC50FFEC0A499.text	03A287BEFFABA50ACFBAC50FFEC0A499.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus arenatus Hwass	<div><p>6. Conus arenatus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 7)</p><p>Conus arenatus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 621–622, no. 16 (lectotype, MHNG (35.5 x 19.5 mm) ( Kohn 1968); "des Isles Philippines ").</p><p>Cucullus arenosus Röding, 1798: 40, no. 494 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 63, fig. 696 (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus stercusmuscarum Röding, 1798: 40, no. 495 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 63, fig. 697 (25 x 13 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus arenatus var. punctisminutissimus Lamarck, 1822: 452, no. 18b.</p><p>Conus arenatus var. granulosa Lamarck, 1822: 452, no. 18c.</p><p>Conus arenatus var. mesokatharos Tryon, 1883: 18, pl. 27, fig. 2 (holotype, NMWC (28 x 15 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus aequipunctata Dautzenberg, 1937: 31, pl. 1, fig. 2 (holotype, IRSN (55 x 32 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "the Red Sea coast at Jiddah (Saudi Arabia)").</p><p>Conus arenatus var. undata Dautzenberg, 1937: 31, pl. 1, fig. 3 ("Amboine").</p><p>Conus arenatus var. granulosa Dautzenberg, 1937: 32, pl. 1, fig. 4 ("Amboine").</p><p>Conus arenatus bizona Coomans, 1981: 16–18, figs. 98, 131 (holotype, ZMA (35 x 20 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Malindi, Kenya ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 106, 8 specimens, SL 25–42 mm; SW 12–18 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, moderately solid to moderately heavy. Body whorl ventricosely conical, outline convex. Siphonal fasciole distinct, occasionally separated from basal zone by an incision. Shoulder rounded, indistincty tuberculate. Spire low, outline moderately convex. Body whorl with weak spiral ribs at base, ribs granulose and extend to shoulder in small shells. Aperture narrow posteriorly, wide anteriorly; outer lip thick, convex.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl with spiral rows of widely spaced brown dots, clustered in two interrupted spiral bands, and one above centre and the other near the base; dotted areas often with underlying grey shadows, most conspicuous within spiral bands. White dashes often irregularly alternating with brown dots. Early spire whorls white. Spire with radial clusters of brown dots. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) reported two museum specimens of C. arenatus, one from Tuticorin (at BMNH) and another labeled “ Bombay ” (at NMW).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Pamban (Table 6) by trawling in 10–40 m.</p><p>Remarks. The last whorl has widely spaced dark brown dots, as opposed to narrowly spaced dots reported by Kohn (1978).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFABA50ACFBAC50FFEC0A499	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFAAA50ACFBAC347FACDA13F.text	03A287BEFFAAA50ACFBAC347FACDA13F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus asiaticus da Motta 1985	<div><p>7. Conus asiaticus da Motta, 1985 (Figure 8)</p><p>Conus asiaticus da Motta, 1985a: 25 (holotype, MHNG (41.5 x 19 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off Tai-chung, Straight of Taiwan, East China Sea").</p><p>Conus lovellreevei, Massila, 1993: 3–6, pl. 1, figs. 4, 5 (holotype, BMNH (42.5 x 19.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off Madras, South East India ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 107, 12 specimens, SL 35–50 mm; SW 16–22 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, moderately solid. Body whorl conical; outline convex adapically; left side slightly concave near base. Shoulder angulate, weakly granulose. Spire of moderate height, outline concave. Body whorl with strong, with prominent widely spaced spiral ribs and ribbons, strongly granulose.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl overlaid with yellowish brown irregular axial streaks and blotches arranged in two spiral bands. Early postnuclear sutural ramps white to pale brownish. Aperture white. Periostracum brown, thin and translucent.</p><p>Distribution. Massilia (1993) reported a specimen of C. asiaticus (as ‘ C. lovellreevei ’) from Madras.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Vembar (Table 6) by trawling in 5–15 m, mainly on the sandy bottoms.</p><p>Remarks. Some specimens of C. asiaticus appear similar to C. inscriptus . However, C. asiaticus can be distinguished from the latter by the irregular yellowish brown axial streaks and blotches on its body whorl, while C. inscriptus has regular spirals of both brown dots and dashes or sometimes either dots or blotches.</p><p>Massilia (1993) has reported a specimen of C. lovellreevei from the southeast coast of India. There have been no records in the literature on the distribution of C. asiaticus from India. The geographical range of C. asiaticus is given as " Japan to Philippines and Vietnam; Queensland" and for C. lovelreevei: "off Madras, India " (Röckel et al. 1995). The specimen described above collected from Vembar has the characteristic features of C. asiaticus thus disproves the statement of Röckel et al. (1995) that 'because of their disjunct geographical ranges, the slight differences in shell morphology between C. asiaticus and C. lovelreevei justify seperation'. The specimen presently collected extends the distribution of C. asiaticus to southeast India.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFAAA50ACFBAC347FACDA13F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFAAA50DCFBAC72AFF78A571.text	03A287BEFFAAA50DCFBAC72AFF78A571.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus augur	<div><p>8. Conus augur [Lightfoot], 1786 (Figure 9)</p><p>Conus augur [Lightfoot], 1786: 44, no. 1046 (representation of lectotype, Knorr 1772: pl.13, fig. 6 (51 x 27 mm) (Kohn</p><p>1964); " Ceylon ").</p><p>Conus punctatus Gmelin, 1791: 3389, no. 40.</p><p>Conus augur Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 685–686, no. 74 ("Isle de Ceylan ").</p><p>Cucullus magus Röding, 1798: 49, no. 624 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 58, fig. 641 (41 x 22 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus pulverulentus Röding, 1798: 44, no. 556 (same as lectotype of C. magus (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 108, 6 specimens, SL 36–50 mm; SW 16–24 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, solid to heavy. Body whorl broadly conical; the sides nearly straight. Shoulder sub-angulate; weakly tuberculate. Spire of moderate height; outline moderately convex. Body whorl with weak spiral ribs at base, ribs granulose in large specimens.</p><p>Ground colour white to pale yellow. Body whorl with numerous spiral rows of fine reddish brown dots from base to shoulder, with two interrupted reddish brown transverse bands on either side of the centre. The posterior band extends irregularly towards the shoulder. Aperture white, outer lip thick.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (2001) reported C. augur without giving precise locality data.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Yerwadi, Keelakarai and Vembar (Table 6) by trawling in 8–15 m.</p><p>Remarks. Conus augur is presumed to inhabit sand substrates. It appears to be rare on the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFAAA50DCFBAC72AFF78A571	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFADA50DCFBAC3FFFDB6A19F.text	03A287BEFFADA50DCFBAC3FFFDB6A19F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus aulicus Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>9. Conus aulicus Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 10)</p><p>Conus aulicus Linnaeus, 1758: 717, no. 279 (lectotype, MSNP (91 x 36 mm) (Kohn 1963); "Asia" corrected to Moluccas, " Indonesia ").</p><p>Conus auratus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 740–741, no. 134 (lectotype, MHNG (106 x 49 mm) ( Kohn 1968); " Ocèan Indien ").</p><p>Cucullus aurifer Röding, 1798: 49, no. 634 (representation of lectotype, Knorr 1768: pl. 19, fig. 1 (84 x 33 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus particolo r Perry, 1810: pl. 39 (representation of holotype, Perry 1810: pl. 39 (119 x 49 mm) (Rockel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus gracianus da Motta &amp; Blocher, 1982: 16–17, figs. 15a, b (holotype, MHNG (44 x 15 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "at the fringes of the Grand Recif towards the open sea of Tulear, South West Madagascar ").</p><p>Conus aulicus var. aurantia “Lamarck” Dautzenberg, 1937: 36 (representation of lectotype, n Knorr 1764: pl. 1, fig. 1 (64 x 27 mm) (Coomans et al. 1981); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus aulicus propenudus Melvill, 1900: 310 (holotype, NMWC (88 x 40 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unkown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 109, 2 specimens, SL 110–148 mm; SW 52–74 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately solid to heavy. Body whorl broadly fusiform, outline straight.</p><p>Shoulder rounded. Spire of moderate height; outline straight. Body whorl with fine, closely spaced spiral ribs on basal fourth to third. Aperture wider at base; outer lip thick.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl with irregular reddish brown and tan blotches separated by large white tents that tend to form three spiral bands, one below the shoulder, one at centre and one above the base. Aperture yellowish pink; outer lip creamy yellow.</p><p>Distribution. Röckel et al. (1995) reported C. aulicus from Rameswaram.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 20–50 m and diving in 12 m on coral rubble substratum.</p><p>Remarks. The occurrence of living specimens at shallow depths agrees with Kohn’s (2001) observation. Of the two specimens collected, one was larger (148 mm) than previous reported specimen (99 mm) from Rameswaram (Röckel et al. 1995).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFADA50DCFBAC3FFFDB6A19F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFACA50CCFBAC0C7FDE4A2EF.text	03A287BEFFACA50CCFBAC0C7FDE4A2EF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus australis Holten 1802	<div><p>10. Conus australis Holten, 1802 (Figure 11)</p><p>Conus australis Holten, 1802: 39, no. 87 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1795: pl. 183, figs. 1774, 1775 (60 x 24 mm) (Kohn 1981); " Taiwan ").</p><p>Conus australis Lamarck, 1810: 439, no. 179 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1795: pl. 183, figs. 1774, 1775 (60 x 24 mm) (Kohn 1981); "Botany Bay, Australie ").</p><p>Conus gracilis Sowerby I, 1823: pl. 267, fig. 4 (representation of holotype, Sowerby I 1823: pl. 267, fig. 4 (72 x 25 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus duplicatus Sowerby I, 1823: pl. 267, fig. 5 (representation of holotype, Sowerby I 1823: pl. 267, fig. 5 (68 x 30 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Solomon Is").</p><p>Asprella alabasteroides Shikama, 1963: 65, pl. 1, figs. 9a, b ("Tatsugahama. Wakayama Pref".).</p><p>Conus cebuganus da Motta &amp; Martin, 1982: 1, 3, fig. 1 (holotype, MHNG (36 x 14. 5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Visayan Sea, between Malapascua Is. and Bantayan Is. and northward").</p><p>Conus gabryae Röckel &amp; Korn, 1992: 13–16, pl. 2, figs. 11–20 (holotype, SMNS (62.5 x 26 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Russell Is., Solomon Archipelago").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 110, 1 specimen, SL 40 mm; SW 15 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large to large, moderately solid-to-solid, with low gloss. Body whorl narrowly conoid-cylindrical, outline convex adapically straight below. Shoulder subangulate. Spire of moderate height; sharply pointed, outline slightly concave. Body whorl encircled with variably spaced granulose ribs, posteriorly obsolete. Aperture moderately wide, outer lip straight, thin, sloping below level of shoulder.</p><p>Ground colour white, suffused with pale brown. Body whorl with brown blotches, tending to form 3 interrupted spiral bands, below the shoulder and above and below centre, the former weakest. Most have many rows of widely spaced squarish brown dots on the spiral ribs. Aperture pale violet.</p><p>Distribution. Smith (1894) reported three specimens from the west coast off Calicut. Specimens from Tranquebar dredged by the Galathea Expedition are in ZMUC (Kohn 1978).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Palayar (Table 6) by trawling in 60 m, mainly of muddy bottom.</p><p>Remarks. Conus australis appears to be a rare species along TamilNadu Coast. The specimen presently collected is the second record from India.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFACA50CCFBAC0C7FDE4A2EF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFACA50FCFBAC57AFC08A771.text	03A287BEFFACA50FCFBAC57AFC08A771.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus bayani Jousseaume 1872	<div><p>11. Conus bayani Jousseaume, 1872 (Figure 12)</p><p>Conus bayani Jousseame, 1872: 200–202, pl. 18, fig. 1 (holotype, BMNH (51 x 24 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Bourbon").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 111, 42 specimens, SL 43–72 mm; SW 20–36 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to moderately large, moderately solid. Body whorl conical; outline straight to slightly sigmoid. Shoulder broad and carinate. Body whorl with distinct or weak spiral ribs and ribbons at base separated by fine grooves. Spire of moderate height, extremely concave and sharply pointed. Aperture generally narrow; outer lip straight, sharp, thin and fragile.</p><p>Ground colour white to pinkish or cream. Body whorl variously covered with deep yellowish-brown blotches and streaks; these tend to form two broad broken spiral bands above and below centre. Some specimens have traces of an additional interrupted spiral band below the shoulder. Spire whorls with scattered blotches of brown. Aperture white, with violet tone. Periostracum brown, thin and translucent.</p><p>Distribution. Melvill &amp; Standen (1901) reported several dead specimens off Bombay (west coast). Along the east coast, Kohn (1978) reported C. bayani specimens obtained from fishing-boats off Madras and specimens deposited in AMNH. Röckel et al. (1995) reported this species from Madras and Cuddalore.</p><p>We collected specimens from northern region (Table 6) by trawling in 5–50 m.</p><p>Remarks. Conus bayani is comparatively abundant at Periyakuppam and occurs frequently with C. amadis, C. monile and C. betulinus . The limited distribution of C. bayani to the Northern region could be due to its preference for sand bottoms. Kohn (2001) considered C. bayani as a deep-water species. However, at Periyakuppam, this species was found at depths &lt;15 m. Specimens collected at Periyakuppam are larger (72 mm) in shell length than those reported (65 mm) by Röckel et al. (1995).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFACA50FCFBAC57AFC08A771	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFAFA50FCFBAC1FFFACFA2F7.text	03A287BEFFAFA50FCFBAC1FFFACFA2F7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus bengalensis (Okutani 1968)	<div><p>12. Conus bengalensis (Okutani, 1968) (Figure 13)</p><p>Darioconus bengalensis Okutani, 1968: 66–69, pl. 7, fig. 2 (holotype, NSMT (97 x 31 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "The Bay of Bengal").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 112, 2 specimens, SL 92–112 mm; SW 46–56 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell large, solid, tall with high gloss. Body whorl narrowly conical, outline straight. Shoul- der narrow, straight angled, slightly concave above and merging into spire. Spire of moderate height, stepped; outline almost straight and sharply pointed. Aperture narrow, parallel, slightly wider posteriorly, anal notch very deep, outer lip sharp, straight; slightly curved anteriorly.</p><p>Ground colour white, heavily covered with dense network of small and medium reddish-brown tents; two rows of dark reddish brown blotches, one above the centre and the other below; blotches are oval and do not tend to form complete spiral bands; blotches contain weakly defined reticulated lines and traces of fine spiral dashes. Spire with similar reddish-dark brown blotches. Spire tip pale pinkish. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Okutani (1968) first reported C. bengalensis (Glory of Bengal) from the Bay of Bengal (as ‘ Darioconus bengalensis ’). Kohn (2001) stated that C. bengalensis was restricted to the Indian Ocean.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Mandapam and Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 50–60 m and 25–30 m.</p><p>Remarks. Röckel et al. (1995) observed that the shells of C. bengalensis from southeast India differed from typical C. bengalensis in having a broader body whorl. However, the specimens from Gulf of Mannar had comparatively narrowly conical body whorl. Conus bengalensis is rare along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFAFA50FCFBAC1FFFACFA2F7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFAFA50ECFBAC562FE91A201.text	03A287BEFFAFA50ECFBAC562FE91A201.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus betulinus Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>13. Conus betulinus Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 14)</p><p>Conus betulinus Linnaeus, 1758: 715, no. 266 (lectotype, LSL (101 x 67 mm) (Kohn 1963); "island of Java, Indonesia ").</p><p>Cucullus medusae Röding, 1798: 43, no. 546 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 142, fig. 1321 (73 x 43 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus betulinus var. immaculate Dautzenberg, 1906: 54, no. 27 ("Ambodifoutra (Côte est de sainte Marie de Madagascar)").</p><p>Conus betulinus var. alternans Dautzenberg, 1937: 48 (representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 334, fig. 8 (Coomans et al. 1980); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus betulinus var. tabulata Dautzenberg, 1937: 48–49 .</p><p>Conus betulinus var. plurizonata Dautzenberg, 1937: 49 .</p><p>Conus betulinus var. scripta Dautzenberg, 1937: 49 .</p><p>Conus betulinus var. paucimaculata Dautzenberg, 1937: 50 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 61, fig. 673); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus zulu Petuch, 1979: 19–20, figs. 28–31 (holotype, DMNH (62 x 35 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off the mouth of the Umfolozi River, Zululand Coast, Natal, South Africa ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 113, 228 specimens, SL 15–148 mm; SW 09– 110 mm .</p><p>Description. Solid to heavy shell, body whorl broadly pyriform, outline convex. Body whorl with about a dozen rounded and closely spaced basal spiral ridges, reminder of the whorl smooth except for fine spiral and axial scratches and occasional random spiral ridges; often with heavy axial growth marks. Shoulder very broad, rounded, not distinct from spire; spire very low, nearly flat except for the first few whorls, forming a small projecting pointed cone. Aperture wide, nearly uniform; outer lip thick, sharp and straight. Small specimens are relatively narrower than adults and the basal ridges extend up to centre.</p><p>Body whorl uniformly creamy white, yellowish to deep orange, more strongly tinged at shoulder and base; covered with few to many spiral rows of small to large blackish spots, usually regularly spaced; spots may be large squares or rounded dots, sometimes with secondary rows of finer brown dots between. The spiral rows are often closely spaced anteriorly and more widely spaced posteriorly; spire and shoulder about same colour as body whorl; early spire whorls often spotted, later spire whorls with blotches. Aperture white; margins pale orange. Juveniles are commonly whitish instead of orange or yellow. Periostracum thick and yellowish brown. Foot and proboscis are dark brown to black.</p><p>Distribution. This species has been reported from Madras southward to Tuticorin (Melvill &amp; Standen 1898; Crichton 1941; Gravely 1942). Specimens collected from Gopalpur and Tuticorin are in the BMNH and from Tranquebar in the ZMUC (Kohn 1978).</p><p>Conus betulinus is widely distributed from shallow inshore water to sand and sandy mud bottoms at depths of 50 m, and also in the coral reefs of the Gulf of Mannar Islands. The specimens reported herein were collected from almost all stations of the Northern and Gulf of Mannar regions (Table 6). Conus betulinus is landed abundantly in Mandapam compared to other stations and is always found together with C. amadis, C. figulinus, C. suratensis and C. loroisii .</p><p>Remarks. We note that C. betulinus is absent from Palk Bay although it occurs both north and south of there. An unidentified species of sea anemone is invariably found attached to the shells in Palayar. A specimen presently collected at Palayar (148 mm) is larger than any earlier reported from India (90 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFAFA50ECFBAC562FE91A201	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFAEA501CFBAC42FFA05A7D1.text	03A287BEFFAEA501CFBAC42FFA05A7D1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus biliosus (Roding 1798)	<div><p>14. Conus biliosus [Röding, 1798] (Figure 15)</p><p>Cucullus biliosus Röding, 1798: 39, no. 489 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 139, fig. 1294 (42 x 25 mm); "Gulf of Mannar, between India and Ceylon ").</p><p>Conus punctatus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 628, no. 23 (lectotype, MHNG (54 x 33 mm) (Walls 1979); "Océan Africain").</p><p>Conus parvulus Link, 1807: 106 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 63, fig. 707 (20 x 12 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus roseus Lamarck, 1810: 37, no. 32 (lectotype, same as that of C. biliosus; "Antilles").</p><p>Conus piperatus Dillwyn, 1817: 401, no. 86.</p><p>Conus concinnus Sowerby II, 1866: 329, no. 438, pl. 28, fig. 646.</p><p>Conus sapphirostoma Weinkauff, 1874: 268 .</p><p>Virroconus imperator Woolacott, 1956: 72, fig. 3 (holotype, AMS (42 x 23.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Trinity Bay, Queensland, Australia ").</p><p>Conus biliosus meyeri Walls, 1979: 3 (holotype, DMNH (44 x 24.5 mm) (Walls 1979); " South Africa, Natal, Genezzano".</p><p>Conus neoroseus da Motta, 1992: 29–30 ("Tabayas Bay, Luzon, Philippines ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 114, 28 specimens, SL 36–52 mm; SW 15–24 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small to large, solid, with a low gloss or dull finish; outline conical, sides straight or inflated posteriorly. Body whorl usually elongate, covered with numerous low and undulating spiral ridges from base to shoulder, ridges weaker near mid-body, below shoulder and heaviest near base; numerous axial and spiral growth threads, lines, and flaws often present, sometimes smooth. Shoulder wide, roundly angled, weakly coronated or undulate, usually slightly concave above. Spire low, bluntly pointed, sides straight to slightly concave, spire whorls distinctly coronate. Aperture moderately wide, uniform; outer lip nearly straight, moderately thick and sharp.</p><p>Distribution. Conus biliosus was reported to occur from Bombay (Subrahmanyam et al. 1952) to Okha in Gujarat (as ‘ C. punctatus Chemnitz’) on the west coast (Menon et al. 1961). In the east coast, it has been found as far north as Vizhagapattinam (Mitchell 1867) to Madras (Melvill &amp; Standen 1898; Röckel et al. 1995), Rameswaram (as ‘ C. piperatus Dillwyn’) and Gulf of Mannar in the South (Thurston 1890, 1895; Satyamurti 1952; Röckel et al. 1995).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Keelakarai by diving in 15–20 m mainly on sand bottom and at Yerwadi by trawling in 10–35 m (Table 6).</p><p>Remarks. The restricted distribution of C. biliosus only to two stations (S-18 &amp; S-19) is yet to be studied.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFAEA501CFBAC42FFA05A7D1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA1A501CFBAC21FFCB8A05F.text	03A287BEFFA1A501CFBAC21FFCB8A05F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus caracteristicus Fischer Von Waldheim 1807	<div><p>15. Conus caracteristicus Fischer Von Waldheim, 1807 (Figure 16)</p><p>Conus caracteristicus Fischer Von Waldheim, 1807: 139, no. 113–116 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1795: pl. 182, fig. 1761 (40 x 27 mm) (Kohn 1981); " Java Sea").</p><p>Conus muscosus Lamarck, 1810: 281, no. 105 (holotype, MNHN (44 x 27 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus characteristicus Dillwyn, 1817: 367, no. 26 (holotype, same as lectotype of C. caracteristicus Fischer Von Waldheim (Röckel et al. 1995); the coast of the Island of St. Bartholomew").</p><p>Conus masoni Nevill &amp; Nevill, 1874: 22, pl. 1 (holotype, BMNH (25 x 14.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Andaman Islands").</p><p>Conus brevis E. A. Smith, 1877: 222–223 (Holotype, BMNH (18.5 x 11 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 115, 48 specimens, SL 36–68 mm; SW 16–36 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell heavy, glossy, sides straight. Body whorl conical to broadly conical, outline convex below shoulder, straight towards base. Shoulder angulate to rounded. Spire nearly flat; seldom slightly elevated, early whorls form a small bluntly pointed cone. Body whorl with strong spiral ridges anteriorly, separated by wide grooves. Aperture moderately wide, uniform in width, slightly flaring anteriorly; outer lip fairly thin.</p><p>Ground colour glossy white or cream with three irregular spiral bands of broad, reddish brown blotches widely inter-spaced below shoulder and on both sides of centre. Shoulder with alternating reddish-brown and white blotches, the same pattern continued on to spire, tip of spire white. Aperture deep yellow. Periostracum yellowish brown, thin, translucent. Siphon with black band on white or pale brown ground colour.</p><p>Distribution. This species has been reported off the Andaman Islands as well as off the coast of Madras (Röckel et al. 1995).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Pondicherry to Nagapattinam (Table 6) by trawling in 10–15 m.</p><p>Remarks. Röckel et al. (1995) stated that C. caracteristicus inhabits sub-tidal to 30 m depths. Subsequently, Kohn (2001) reported this species inhabiting intertidal and shallow sub-tidal regions. We observed this species on sandy bottoms at depths of 10– 15 m. One specimen collected off Periyakuppam is the largest (66 mm) in shell length recorded from the Indian coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA1A501CFBAC21FFCB8A05F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA1A500CFBAC68AFB1CA549.text	03A287BEFFA1A500CFBAC68AFB1CA549.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus consors Sowerby I 1833	<div><p>16. Conus consors Sowerby I, 1833 (Figure 17)</p><p>Conus consors Sowerby I, 1833: pt. 36, fig. 42 (representation of lectotype, Sowerby I 1833: pt. 36, fig. 42 (62 x 34 mm) (Kohn 1992); " Singapore ").</p><p>Conus anceps A. Adams, 1854: 118 (lectotype, BMNH (78 x 36 mm) (Coomans et al. 1980); " Moluccas ").</p><p>Conus innexus A. Adams, 1854: 119 (syntype, BMNH (48 x 22 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Natal").</p><p>Conus daullei Crosse, 1858: 119–120, pl. 2, figs. 2, 2a ("insulam Mayotte ").</p><p>Conus poehlianus Sowerby III, 1887: 257, no. 474, pl. 31, figs. 682, 683 (holotype, BMNH (48 x 22 mm) (Röckel et al.</p><p>1995); " New Ireland ".</p><p>Conus turschi da Motta, 1985b: 1–7, pl. 1, figs. 1, 2; pl. 2, fig. 4 (holotype, MHNG (82.5 x 35 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Andaman Sea off Kantang, South West Thailand ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 116, 4 specimens, SL 42–66 mm; SW 25–48 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, moderately solid to heavy. Body whorl narrowly conical; outline convex adapically; with high gloss; about 10 to 12 low, rounded spiral ridges above the base separated by shallow, weakly punctuate grooves; rest of the body whorl with numerous spiral and axial threads and growth lines. Shoulder broad, rounded and narrower than body whorl immediately anterior to it. Spire moderately low, sharply pointed, sides straight. Aperture fairly wide, outer lip slightly concave in the middle.</p><p>Body whorl pale yellow with two spiral bands above and below the centre; spiral band above the centre is broader. Colour of bands ranges from yellowish brown to dark brown. Usually indistinct dark brownish axial streaks on the spiral band, spire yellowish to tan, almost with a few pale brown spots and streaks near sutures, the pattern indistinct. Aperture bluish white. Periostracum thin, transparent and brown.</p><p>Distribution. Röckel et al. (1995) and Kohn (2001) reported C. consors from India without precise locality data.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Pamban and Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 20– 30 m and 30–50 m.</p><p>Remarks. Conus consors appears to be a rare species along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA1A500CFBAC68AFB1CA549	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA0A500CFBAC397FBD5A1D7.text	03A287BEFFA0A500CFBAC397FBD5A1D7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus coronatus Gmelin 1791	<div><p>17. Conus coronatus Gmelin, 1791 (Figure 18)</p><p>Conus coronatus Gmelin, 1791: 3389, no. 39 (neotype, BMNH (27.5 x 16.5 mm) (Kohn 1966); " Australia ").</p><p>Cucullus coronalis Röding, 1798: 38, nos. 478, 479 (refers to the original figure of C. coronatus Gmelin (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus parvus Gebauer, 1802: 7, no. 55 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 63, fig. 704 (30 x 18 mm) (Kohn 1981); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus aristophanes “Duclos ” Sowerby II, 1857: 9, pl. 4, figs. 81, 82 (lectotype, BMNH (35.5 x 23 mm) (Coomans et al. 1981); "Philippine and Sandwitch Islands").</p><p>Conus minimus Linnaeus var. condoriana Crosse &amp; Fisher, 1864: 334 (holotype (21 x 12 mm) acc. Crosse &amp; Fischer (Röckel et al. 1995); "Poulo-Condor, in the South China Sea, off Saigon").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 117, 2 specimens, SL 37 mm; SW 26 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, moderately solid. Body whorl ventricosely conical, outline slightly convex, wider near the base. Shoulder sub-angulate, weakly tuberculate. Spire of low to moderate height. Aperture wide, outer lip convex.</p><p>Ground colour pinkish to violet, with pale bluish spiral bands below shoulder and centre. Spiral bands of variously sized brown and black markings on either side of sub-central band, overlaying the two solid colour bands. Spire similar to body colour. Aperture pale grey, edges tinged dark violet.</p><p>Distribution. The occurrence of this species in the east coast was restricted to the islands of the Gulf of Mannar viz. Krusadai Island ([Chennappayya] 1927), Shingle Island (Satyamurti 1952), Krusadai Island and Mandapam Camp (Kohn 1978). In the west coast, Kohn (1978) collected specimens from Okha, Gujarat. He also reported museum specimens collected from Tuticorin (at BMNH) and Purnagath, Ratnagiri (at AMNH).</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by diving in 12 m on sand and coral rubble and from the seaweed washed ashore.</p><p>Remarks. In concurrence with previous records, the two specimens collected in this study were found off Keelakarai, approximately 50 km west of Krusadai Island and Mandapam Camp, where the species was previously reported. Conus coronatus is a rare species along the TamilNadu Coast. The present and previous reports suggest the distribution of this species is restricted to the Gulf of Mannar.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA0A500CFBAC397FBD5A1D7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA3A503CFBAC0C7FC10A5B7.text	03A287BEFFA3A503CFBAC0C7FC10A5B7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus dictator Melvill 1898	<div><p>18. Conus dictator Melvill, 1898 (Figure 19)</p><p>Conus (Leptoconus) dictator Melvill, 1898: 9–10, pl. 1, fig. 10 (holotype, BMNH (46 x 19 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Sheikh Shuaib Island, Persian Gulf ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 118, 38 specimens, SL 22–46 mm; SW 08– 28 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell small to medium sized, moderately light. Body whorl narrowly to broadly conical. Shoulder angulate. Spire of moderate height, outline concave. Body whorl with spiral grooves separated by ribbons on basal third to two thirds, sometimes to shoulder.</p><p>Ground colour cream. Body whorl with orange to brown axial streaks or flammules, generally fusing in three spiral bands, within the basal third, near centre and below the shoulder. Aperture white marginally, violet within; basal portion often orange.</p><p>Distribution. Röckel et al. (1995) reported C. dictator from Rameswaram, south India.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Keelakarai by trawling in 10–50 m and very few from Vembar by diving in 3–8 m (Table 6). This species was found to occur along with C. inscriptus on sand substrates.</p><p>Remarks. Conus dictator may be mistaken for C. lentiginosus; the latter species is more convex and has a broader body whorl, with weak tuberculation on the spire whorls. Previous records revealed that C. dictator occurs in 15– 100 m. We collected specimens within depths of 3– 8 m. A specimen collected from Keelakarai of 46 mm shell length is the largest reported from Indian waters.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA3A503CFBAC0C7FC10A5B7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA3A503CFBAC3A2FDDEA154.text	03A287BEFFA3A503CFBAC3A2FDDEA154.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus ebraeus Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>19. Conus ebraeus Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 20)</p><p>Conus ebraeus Linnaeus, 1758: 715, no. 268 (lectotype, LSL (28 x 19 mm) (Kohn 1963); " India ").</p><p>Conus quadratus Perry, 1811: pl. 24, fig. 5 (representation of holotype, Perry 1811: pl. 24, fig. 5 (40 x 25 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Coast of Africa").</p><p>Conus judaeus Bergh, 1895: 161–163, pl. 4, fig. 91; pl. 6, figs. 128–131 (holotype, ZMUC (32 x 21 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "M. philippinense").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 119, 8 specimens, SL 25–32 mm; SW 13–15 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small and heavy, broadly conical, sides convex. Body whorl with low spiral ridges, basally these often extend to centre. Shoulder roundly angled, coronated, coronations weak. Spire low, convex and bluntly pointed; spire whorls weakly coronated and with 4–5 heavy spiral ridges on top. Aperture narrower posteriorly; outer lip thick, sharp and convex.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl with 3–4 spiral rows of black blotches between base and sub-shoulder; blotches squarish to more or less axially elongate. Shoulder with large squarish black spots, alternating with light background; spire with irregular black blotches. Aperture bluish. Periostracum thin, smooth, translucent and yellowish to olive.</p><p>Distribution. The first report of C. ebraeus was by Linnaeus (1758) from India. Subsequent distributional records were from in and around Krusadai Islands of the Gulf of Mannar (Thurston 1890; [Chennappayya] 1927; Satyamurti 1952).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by diving in 10–15 m on sand and coral rubble substrate and few washed ashore.</p><p>Remarks. Conus ebraeus appears to be a very rare species along the TamilNadu Coast, with the distribution restricted to the Gulf of Mannar.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA3A503CFBAC3A2FDDEA154	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA2A502CFBAC0C7FA93A201.text	03A287BEFFA2A502CFBAC0C7FA93A201.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus eburneus Hwass 1792	<div><p>20. Conus eburneus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 21)</p><p>Conus eburneus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 640–641, no. 89 (representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 324, fig. 1 (46</p><p>x 30 mm) (Kohn 1968); "aux mers des Indes orientales"). Cucullus quadratulus Röding, 1798: 41, no. 512 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 61, fig. 670 (45 x 24 mm)</p><p>(Kohn 1975); locality unknown). Conus alternatus Link, 1807: 101–102 (lectotype same as of C. quadratulus Röding (Kohn 1981); locality unknown). Conus crassus Sowerby II, 1858: 25, no. 203, pl. 12, figs. 254, 255 (lectotype, BMNH (44 x 29 mm) (Walls 1979); "Feejee Islands"). Conus eburneus var. polyglotta Weinkauff, 1874: 244 ("Pelew Ins., Gesellsch.-Ins. ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 120, 2 specimens, SL 40 mm; SW 25 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, moderately solid with high gloss. Body whorl conical, outline convex at sub-shoulder and straight below. Base truncate. Shoulder rounded. Spire low, pointed and sides straight; spire whorls flat. Body whorl with numerous weak spiral ribs and ribbons on basal fourth to half. Aperture narrow, slightly wider at base, outer lip thin and sharp.</p><p>Ground colour white, body whorl with spiral rows of large, variably spaced reddish-brown squarish spots and rectangular bars of various sizes; four light-yellow bands underlie spiral rows of spots below the shoulder, on both sides of centre and on the base. Shoulder with regular oblique brown spots, extending on to last spire whorl; other spire whorls with regular reddish-brown spots; tip of spire white. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) reported museum specimens of C. eburneus collected from Tuticorin (at BMNH) and Tranquebar (at ZMUC) by Winckworth.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Tuticorin (Table 6) from the trash discarded at the fishing harbour. The depth and substratum informations are thus not known.</p><p>Remarks. After Winckworth’s collection, this is the second report of C. eburneus from India.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA2A502CFBAC0C7FA93A201	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA2A502CFBAC422FCE1A13C.text	03A287BEFFA2A502CFBAC422FCE1A13C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus eucoronatus Sowerby III 1903	<div><p>21. Conus eucoronatus Sowerby III, 1903 (Figure 22)</p><p>Conus eucoronatus Sowerby III, 1903: 217, pl. 3, fig. 9 (lectotype, SAMC (45 x 25 mm) (Coomans et al. 1986); " Cape St. Blaize bearing N. 850 W.; distant 4 ½ miles").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 121, 2 specimens, SL 32–35 mm; SW 18–20 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately heavy, biconic. Shoulder broad and angulate with many small tubercles. Spire moderately high, sharply pointed, sides straight. Body whorl with 15 broad, flat spiral ribbons from base to shoulder, axially striate. Aperture wide and uniform in width, outer lip thin and sharp.</p><p>Ground colour white, body whorl with spirally arranged dark or light brown blotches. Aperture white. Periostracum pale yellow and thin.</p><p>Distribution. Röckel et al. (1995) reported the occurrence of C. eucoronatus in south India. Kohn (2001) reported a specimen trawled at 400 m off Kanyakumari.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Tuticorin (Table 6) from the discards of the fishingboats trawled at 50–200 m.</p><p>Remarks. Conus eucoronatus is a rare deep water species of Conus known for its unique shape, sculpture and pattern (Röckel et al. 1995). The specimen presently collected is the largest (35 mm), compared to the previous recorded (28 mm) by Röckel et al. (1995) from India.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA2A502CFBAC422FCE1A13C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA2A505CFBAC73AFC83A5F1.text	03A287BEFFA2A505CFBAC73AFC83A5F1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus eximius Reeve 1849	<div><p>22. Conus eximius Reeve, 1849 (Figure 23)</p><p>Conus eximius Reeve, 1849: pl. 6, no. 256 (type, BMNH (27.5 x 15 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Bay of Bengal to Papua New Guinea, Philippines and Taiwan ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 122, 27specimens, SL 35–55 mm; SW 20–36 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, light to solid. Body whorl conical, outline slightly convex near shoul- der, straight below. Shoulder angulate; spire low to high, outline concave to deeply concave; basal half of body whorl with variably spaced spiral grooves separating ribs anteriorly and a few ribbons posteriorly. Outer lip of aperture thick and nearly straight.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl with broad, mostly interrupted brown spiral bands on either side of the centre; often brown axial flames extend from the posterior brown band to shoulder, sometimes additional irregularly spaced band below shoulder. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) first reported the occurrence of C. eximius in India by noting museum specimens in the AMNH and USNM, collected from Madras.</p><p>We collected specimens from Madras to Periyakuppam (Table 6) by trawling in 5 to 15 m mainly on sand bottom.</p><p>Remarks. No previous record of this species was available from the TamilNadu Coast, except that based on specimens deposited at AMNH and USNM. The specimen collected from Periyakuppam is the largest (55 mm) recorded so far in India. Conus eximius is generally reported as a deep-water species (Walls 1979; Röckel et al. 1995; Kohn 2001), but the present survey collected this species in shallow depths. This species is usually landed with C. amadis, C. malacanus, C. bayani, C. monile and other gastropods like Xancus pyrum Linnaeus and Rapana bulbosa Solander.</p><p>The specimens of C. eximius are morphologically similar to C. malacanus . However, the latter has two uninterrupted yellowish to orange bands on either side of the centre of the last whorl. Spire height and colour pattern of last whorl of C. eximius varied considerably.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA2A505CFBAC73AFC83A5F1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA5A504CFBAC475FEB5A4C1.text	03A287BEFFA5A504CFBAC475FEB5A4C1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus figulinus Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>23. Conus figulinus Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 24)</p><p>Conus figulinus Linnaeus, 1758: 715, no. 267 (lectotype, LSL (65 x 42 mm) (Kohn 1963); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus buxeus Röding, 1798: 42, no. 530 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 59, fig. 656 (57 x 37 mm) (Kohn 1975); "Amboine").</p><p>Conus figulinus violascens Barros e Cunha, 1933: 37–38 (two syntypes, MZUC (SL 48 and 42 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 123, 142 specimens, SL 22–84 mm; SW 14–46 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, solid to heavy with high gloss. Body whorl ventricosely conical, posteriorly very convex with a narrow base, anterior third to quarter of body whorl with variable spiral ridges, these sometimes heavy or weak; rest of body whorl smooth, except for numerous axial threads and growth marks; shoulder rounded, flat or slightly convex above; spire very low or flat, early whorls form a small sharply pointed cone in the middle. Aperture wide, slightly flaring anteriorly; outer lip thick.</p><p>Body whorl grey to dark tan, usually densely covered with narrow uninterrupted dark brown spiral lines; top of shoulder and spire usually dark brown, contrasting with body whorl colouration. Interior of aperture bluish white to pale bluish. Siphon and foot black.</p><p>Distribution. Mitchell (1867) and Frauenfeld (1869) first reported C. figulinus from Madras. Subsequent records along the east coast are from Tuticorin (Thurston 1895), Pamban (Sundaram 1969) and Rameswaram (Röckel et al. 1995). Along the west coast, Subrahmanyam et al. (1952) recorded specimens from Bombay. Museum specimens were reported by Kohn (1978) from Bombay (at ANSP), Travancore (at ZMS) and Malabar (at NMW).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected by trawling in 5–50 m. This species was widely distributed in almost all stations of the northern region and found abundant in the Gulf of Mannar (Table 6) .</p><p>Remarks. Conus figulinus is often mistaken for C. loroisii because of its similar shape, especially if the periostracum is intact. However, the absence of distinct brown spiral lines on the last whorl of C. loroisii distinguishes it from C. figulinus . In addition, C. loroisii and C. loroisii f. insignis do have similar shape and differ only in the colour pattern. The body whorl of C. loroisii f. insignis has more closely spaced blackish brown spiral lines from base to shoulder than C. figulinus . There are several views in assigning C. loroisii, C. figulinus and form insignis to a valid species / subspecies level (Walls 1979; Coomans et al. 1979b; Tucker 1984; Richard 1990; Röckel et al. 1995). Richard (1990) assigned form insignis to C. loroisii and declared C. loroisii as a valid species. Recently, Röckel et al. (1995) have clearly analysed earlier literatures as well the morphological charaters and defined that C. figulinus and C. loroisii as distinct species. Also they have assigned form insignis to C. loroisii . We agree and have followed Röckel et al. (1995).</p><p>Conus figulinus is often landed with C. betulinus, C. loroisii and other gastropods such as turrids, Xancus pyrum Linnaeus, Hemifusus pugilinus Born, and Babylonia spirata Linnaeus.</p><p>Previous records suggested C. figulinus is a shallow water species, but we observed this species to occur in both deep and shallow fine sand and algal bottoms. A large population of this species was observed around the sea grass bottoms of Oodai (Mandapam) indicating a specific preference.</p><p>Living C. figulinus, C. monile and C. loroisii are found with sea anemones on their shell surface (Figure 62J, K &amp; L).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA5A504CFBAC475FEB5A4C1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA4A504CFBAC36FFDB7A017.text	03A287BEFFA4A504CFBAC36FFDB7A017.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus frigidus Reeve 1848	<div><p>24. Conus frigidus Reeve, 1848 (Figure 25)</p><p>Conus frigidus Reeve, 1848: pl. 3, no. 284 (type, BMNH (26 x 15 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus maltzanianus Weinkauff, 1873: 204–205, pl. 32, figs. 3–6 (two syntypes, LMD (51 x 29; 41.5 x 23 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Tahiti und andere Südsee-Inseln").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 124, 14 specimens, SL 38–42 mm; SW 15–20 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell small to medium sized, solid. Body whorl conical; outline almost straight. Shoulders sub-angulate; spire of moderate height, outline straight. Body whorl usually with variably spaced generally granulose spiral ribs from base to centre or shoulder, surface seldom smooth.</p><p>Shell tan, with paler transverse bands at shoulder and centre, base violet. Aperture purple. Exterior colour band visible as a band along interior border of lip. Periostracum yellowish brown, thick, opaque with numerous axial ridges.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) first reported C. frigidus from India with precise locality data. He has also reported museum specimens collected from Dwarka, Gujarat (at ZSI) and Tuticorin (at BMNH).</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by diving in 3–8 m on sand bottom around rock boulders and within rock crevices and by trawling in 10–30 m.</p><p>Remarks. The previous record by Kohn (1978) and the present observations of this species at Keelakarai suggests that its distribution is limited to the Gulf of Mannar. This is the second record of C. frigidus from the east coast and the largest (38 mm).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA4A504CFBAC36FFDB7A017	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA4A507CFBAC6C2FE47A5A4.text	03A287BEFFA4A507CFBAC6C2FE47A5A4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus geographus Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>25. Conus geographus Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 26)</p><p>Conus geographus Linnaeus, 1758: 718 (lectotype, LSL (98 x 48 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Indiis").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 125, 18 specimens, SL 60–120 mm; SW 28–48 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell thin, large and light in weight, but solid. Body whorl narrowly cylindrical; outline nearly straight or slightly convex above and nearly parallel centrally, slightly concave to convex (right side) or concave (left side) below. Body whorl with a few, very low and indistinct oblique ridges on the base, numerous axial threads over body whorl. Shoulder angulate with low, rounded coronations. Spire low, sides concave, the whorls stepped and with raised margins. Aperture wider at base than near shoulder, outer lip thin, sharp and convex.</p><p>Body whorl creamy white, pinkish or bluish white, heavily covered with a reticulated network of fine brownish lines from base to shoulder; reticulations may be distinct or broken appearing mottled; usually two to three broad spiral bands within basal third, above centre and often below shoulder (invariably few specimens showed slight variation in the intensity of the colour pattern of the body whorl). Spire colour like body whorl with large brownish blotches at the margins of the coronations; early whorls pink. Interior of aperture bluish white to pale pinkish, exterior pattern showing through. Periostracum thin, smooth translucent, yellowish-orange.</p><p>Distribution. The first report of C. geographus was from Tuticorin (Thurston 1895). Subsequent records are from Krusadai Island (Satyamurti 1952) and Rameswaram (Sundaram 1969). Kohn (1978) reported a museum specimen collected from Tuticorin (at MGM). He also stated that the distribution of this species in India is probably restricted to the Gulf of Mannar and Palk Bay.</p><p>The specimens from described herein were collected from Gulf of Mannar (Table 6) by trawling in 15–30 m.</p><p>Remarks. One of the specimens of C. geographus collected from Pamban resembles C. fragilissimus, comparatively thinner and with sharp outer lip compared to other specimens (Figure 62M). The restricted distribution of this species to the Gulf of Mannar could be due to its preference for corals and sand bottoms with appropriate prey organisms.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA4A507CFBAC6C2FE47A5A4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA7A507CFBAC3B5FB37A15C.text	03A287BEFFA7A507CFBAC3B5FB37A15C.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus gubernator Hwass	<div><p>26. Conus gubernator Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 27)</p><p>Conus gubernator Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 727–728, no. 121 (lectotype, MHNG (76 x 34 mm) (Kohn 1968); "Ocean asiatique").</p><p>Conus terminus Lamarck, 1810: 426, no. 141 (representation of holotype, Kiener 1845: pl. 48, fig. 1d (83 x 32 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Ocean asiatique").</p><p>Conus leehmani Röckel &amp; da Motta, 1979: 17–18 (holotype, MHNG (65.5 x 34 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Maldive Is., Indian Ocean").</p><p>Conus veillardi da Motta, 1990: 44–46 (holotype, MHNG (52.5 x 25.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Glorieuses Islands, 11.30 S 47.20 E, western Indian Ocean").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 126, 1 specimen, SL 43 mm; SW 18 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large, solid to moderately heavy, glossy. Body whorl ventricosely conical; outline slightly convex adapically, straight below. Shoulder angulate. Spire of moderate height, bluntly pointed; outline slightly convex. Body whorl with several shallow spiral grooves on basal fourth to third, rest of the whorl smooth. Aperture uniformly wide, outer lip thin, sharp, straight.</p><p>Ground colour white suffused with light brown. Body whorl with separated blackish-brown axial markings; variable in shape and size, ranging from irregular flecks to large, zig-zag flames. Early spire whorls pinkish. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Melvill &amp; Standen (1898) first reported C. gubernator from the Indian Coast. Satyamurti (1952) reported it from Pamban. Kohn (1978) reported specimens of C. gubernator deposited in BMNH and NMW.</p><p>The specimen described herein was collected from the Pamban shore (Table 6). The exact depth is not known.</p><p>Remarks. Conus gubernator appears to be a rare species along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA7A507CFBAC3B5FB37A15C	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA6A506CFBAC0C7FAEDA344.text	03A287BEFFA6A506CFBAC0C7FAEDA344.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus hyaena Hwass 1792	<div><p>27. Conus hyaena Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 28)</p><p>Conus hyaena Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 656–657, no. 55 (lectotype, MHNG (61 x 33.5 mm) (Kohn 1968); "la côte ouest de 1’ Arique").</p><p>Conus unicolor Sowerby I, 1834: pl. 54, fig. 59 (lectotype, BMNH (46 x 23.5 mm) (Kohn 1992); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus concolor Sowerby II, 1841: pls. 177–184 (" Solomon Islands ").</p><p>Conus mutablis Reeve, 1844: pl. 45, nos. 249 (syntype, BMNH (29 x 16.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus tribunus Crosse, 1865: 312–313, pl. 10, fig. 2 (" California ").</p><p>Conus kobelti Löbbecke, 1882: 189–190, pl. 10, figs. 4, 5 (holotype, LMD (42 x 23 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus halli da Motta, 1983: 3, figs. 2, 6 (holotype, MHNG (53 x 28 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Pasir Putih, about 180 kilometers east of Surabaya, Java, Indonesia ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 127, 16 specimens, SL 36–68 mm; SW 17–32 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium to moderately large, moderately solid-to-solid. Body whorl conical, upper sides convex near shoulder, less so or conical below, left side concave near base; shoulder angulate to rounded. Spire of low to moderate height, outline straight to slightly convex. Aperture uniformly wide; outer lip sharp evenly convex.</p><p>Body whorl dull white to yellow, heavily covered with broad reddish brown to dark brown streaks, usually a paler mid-body area visible through streaks; spire and shoulder dirty white to brown, heavily covered with curved light brown lines and blotches, about the same colour as the body whorl. Aperture bluish white. Periostracum thick, brown to dark brown in colour.</p><p>Distribution. Abercrombie (1893) and Melvill &amp; Abercrombie (1893) first reported C. hyaena (as ‘ C. mutablis Reeve’) from Bombay along the west coast. Subsequent records are from Madras (Melvill &amp; Standen 1898) on the east coast and from Goa and Panjim on the west coast (Melvill &amp; Standen 1901). Röckel et al. (1995) reported specimens from the east (Madras &amp; Keelakarai) and west coasts (Bombay).</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 20–50 m. We have also collected 42 specimens from Colaba, Bombay , in sandy intertidal regions and buried in sand around rock boulders and in rock crevices. Kohn (1978) has also made similar observations of this species from Bombay.</p><p>Remarks. The specimens classified as C. mutablis Reeve (Kohn 1978) is now considered a junior synonym of C. hyaena Hwass (Kohn 2001) . A large population of this species was found in Bombay. A detailed study of the population attributes of C. hyaena would be of interest given that the habitats of these two populations are different and also for their discontinuous distribution between the west and east coasts of India.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA6A506CFBAC0C7FAEDA344	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFFA6A539CFBAC595FEE3A4D9.text	03A287BEFFA6A539CFBAC595FEE3A4D9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus imperialis Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>28. Conus imperialis Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 29)</p><p>Conus imperialis Linnaeus, 1758: 712, no. 251 (lectotype, LSL (65 x 37 mm) (Walls 1979); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus fuscatus Born, 1778: 126–127, no. 1780 (lectotype, NMW (53 x 31 mm) (Kohn 1964; Walls 1979); " Mauritius ").</p><p>Cucullus coronaducalis Röding, 1798: 38, no. 464 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 62, fig. 693 (41 x 26 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus regius Röding, 1798: 38, no. 465 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 139, fig. 1289 (44 x 25 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus viridulus Lamarck, 1810: 31, no. 9 (representation of type, Kiener 1845: pl. 7, fig. 1 (65 x 36 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Océan austral").</p><p>Conus queketti E.A. Smith, 1906: 22, pl. 7, fig. 1 (holotype, BMNH (27 x 14 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Isezela, Natal").</p><p>Conus dautzenbergi Fenaux, 1942: 2, fig. 2 (" Madagascar ").</p><p>Conus douvillei Fenaux, 1942: 2–3, fig. 5 (" Madagascar ").</p><p>Conus imperialis compactus Wils, 1970: 8, 12, pl. 2, fig. 7 (lectotype, ZMA (71 x 43 mm) (Coomans et al. 1985a); "Nosy Bé, Madagascar ").</p><p>Conus imperialis nigrescens Barros e Cunha, 1933: 17, no. 9 (holotype, MZUC (66 x 39 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus imperialis flavescens Barros e Cunha, 1933: 18, no. 10 (two syntypes, MZUC (42 x 25; 39 x 20.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 128, 1 specimen, SL 48 mm; SW 24 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large, solid and glossy. Body whorl conical; outline nearly straight and tapering to a narrow base. Body whorl with several low, widely spaced spiral ridges near basal third. Shoulder wide, angulate and strongly tuberculate. Spire very low; irregularly stepped, tip rounded, blunt; outline slightly concave. Post nuclear spire whorls distinctly tuberculate. Aperture narrow slightly wider anteriorly; outer lip sharp, thick.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl encircled with two brown bands variable in width, split into axial streaks and blotches. Spiral rows of alternating blackish-brown and white dashes extending from base to shoulder, rows closer near anterior. Base, siphonal fasciole and basal part of columella bluish grey suffused with brown. Spire dull white with small brownish blotches and streaks. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Conus imperialis has not been previously reported from India.</p><p>The specimen described herein was collected from Tuticorin and Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 40– 80 m and 20–50 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFFA6A539CFBAC595FEE3A4D9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF99A538CFBAC307FB5AA4B1.text	03A287BEFF99A538CFBAC307FB5AA4B1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus inscriptus Reeve 1843	<div><p>29. Conus inscriptus Reeve, 1843 (Figure 30)</p><p>Conus inscriptus Reeve, 1843: pl. 29, no. 164 (three syntypes, BMNH (34.5 x 18; 32.5 x 17; 29 x 14.5 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus kaetii Sowerby II, 1858: 34, no. 298, pl. 20, fig. 479 (two syntypes, BMNH (48.5 x 22 mm; 46 x 22 mm); " Seychelles ").</p><p>Conus planiliratus Sowerby III, 1870: 255, pl. 22, fig. 1 (type, BMNH (41 x 20 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus tegulatus Sowerby III, 1870: 256, pl. 22, fig. 12 (holotype, BMNH (19 x 9 mm); " China Seas ").</p><p>Conus cuneiformis E.A. Smith, 1877: 202–204 (lectotype, BMNH (25 x 14 mm) (Coomans et al. 1985a); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus adenensis E. A. Smith, 1892: 401–402, pl. 33, fig. 1 (lectotype, BMNH (48 x 21.5 mm) (Coomans et al. 1979a); "Aden").</p><p>Conus maculospira Pilsbry, 1921: 329–330 .</p><p>Conus cavailloni Fenaux, 1942: 4, fig. 12 (" Bermudes ").</p><p>Conus keatiformis Shikama, 1977: 19–20, pl. 4, figs. 1a, b, pl. 5, fig. 7 (holotype, KPM (46 x 24 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "East China Sea").</p><p>Conus maculospira bangladeshianus da Motta, 1985c: 6–7, pl. 1, figs. 5a, b, 6a, b (holotype, MHNG (43 x 23 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off the coast of Bangladesh in the Bay of Bengal, Indian Ocean").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 129, 315 specimens, SL 23–68 mm; SW 11–33 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium to moderately large, light in weight with a low gloss or dull surface. Body whorl ventricosely conical to conical, outline convex posteriorly, usually straight below tapering to a very narrow and long base. Shoulder angulate to sub-angulate. Spire of low to moderate height; outline concave to straight, most frequently straight and sometimes with stepped whorls in smaller specimens. Body whorl with widely spaced, weak to pronounced spiral grooves separated by ribbons on basal third to two thirds; anteriorly, grooves are wide, often containing spiral threads or fine ribs.</p><p>Ground colour pale brown to dark brown, sometime rusty brown. Body whorl with spiral rows of orange to dark brown dots, spots, bars or axial streaks fusing into axial flames and blotches and forming interrupted spiral bands below shoulder and within adapical and abapical thirds. Sub-shoulder band usually less prominent than anterior bands. Aperture white. Periostracum brown, thin, translucent and smooth; sometimes thicker and coarse. Almost completely white shells of C. inscriptus from India were described as C. i. cuneiformis (Röckel et al. 1995) .</p><p>Distribution. The earliest report of C. inscriptus (as ‘ C. planiliratus Sowerby’) was by Smith (1894) off Calicut. Melvill &amp; Standen (1901) reported this species (also as ‘ C. planiliratus ’) from Bombay. Kohn (1978) reported museum specimens collected from Gujarat (at MCZ). Along the east coast, specimens are reported from Ratnagiri (at MCZ), Tranquebar (at ZMUC) and off Cape Comorin (at AMNH). Specimens were also obtained off Madras [as communicated by F. B. Steiner to Kohn (1978)]. Kohn (1978) obtained C. inscriptus specimens trawled off PortoNovo. All specimens in the above reports were collected at depths of 40– 100 m.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected by trawling in 15–80 m at major fish landing centers of the TamilNadu Coast (Table 6). Particularly at Palayar and Cuddalore, enormous quantities (approximately more than half a tonne per week) of C. inscriptus were landed as by-catch from the fishing-boats that trawl for shrimp ( Penaeus monodon Fabricius).</p><p>Remarks. We obtained albino specimens of C. i. cuneiformis from Vembar (Figure 62N). The large quantity of C. inscriptus around Palayar and Cuddalore suggest that this species prefers sandy-mud and muddy substrates. Conus loroisii and turrid species are always found associated with C. inscriptus .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF99A538CFBAC307FB5AA4B1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF98A538CFBAC2BFFEB5A09F.text	03A287BEFF98A538CFBAC2BFFEB5A09F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus lentiginosus Reeve 1844	<div><p>30. Conus lentiginosus Reeve, 1844 (Figure 31)</p><p>Conus lentiginosus Reeve, 1843: pl. 44, no. 245 (syntype, BMNH (29 x 16 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 130, 16 specimens, SL 32–36 mm; SW 16–18 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small to medium-sized, light to solid, glossy. Body whorl conical; outline convex at adapical two-thirds to three-fourths, straight or concave below; left side consistently sigmoid, right side almost straight. Shoulder angulate. Spire of moderate height, outline concave or sigmoid. Body whorl with axially striate spiral grooves on basal third, separated by ribs anteriorly and by ribbons posteriorly.</p><p>Ground colour white, variably tinged with violet. Body whorl with confluent brown axial flames, generally arranged in three spiral bands, below shoulder, near centre and within basal third. Spiral rows of brown dots and dashes extend from base to shoulder, varying in number and arrangement. Aperture white, tinged with violet deep within. Periostracum thin, brown, smooth and translucent.</p><p>Distribution. The first record of this species from India was by Reeve (1843). Subsequent records (Abercrombie 1893; Melvill &amp; Abercrombie 1893; Melvill &amp; Standen 1901; Hornell &amp; Tomlin 1951; Subrahmanyam et al. 1952) reported this species off Bombay (west coast). Along the east coast, Kohn (1978) referred to specimens in the AMNH and BMNH from the Gulf of Mannar and also reported one specimen of C. lentiginosus deposited in the ZSI as dredged off Vizhagapattinam.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 10–20 m and diving in 8–10 m and from Vembar (Table 6) by trawling in 10–30 m.</p><p>Remarks. The restricted distribution of this species in the Gulf of Mannar and the particular abundance at Keelakarai (S-19) indicate that they probably prefer sandy bottoms and rock crevices similar to previous records from Vizhagapattinam. Kohn (1978) observed that specimens from east and west coasts are essentially similar except for the pinkish tan base found in the Gulf of Mannar. Such an exception was not observed in this study.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF98A538CFBAC2BFFEB5A09F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF98A53BCFBAC74AFB68A544.text	03A287BEFF98A53BCFBAC74AFB68A544.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus leopardus Roding 1798	<div><p>31. Conus leopardus Röding, 1798 (Figure 32)</p><p>Conus leopardus Röding, 1798: 41, no. 520 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 60, fig. 666 (78 x 43 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus millepunctatus Lamarck, 1822: 461–462, no. 45 (representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 323, fig. 5 (137 x 75 mm) (Walls 1979); "Océan asiatique").</p><p>Conus millepunctatus var. aldrovandi Dautzenberg, 1937: 171–172 representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 324, fig. 4 (119 x 66 mm) (Coomans et al. 1980); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 131, 48 specimens, SL 60–147 mm; SW 32–90 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell large and heavy. Body whorl usually conical, outline almost straight. Shoulder broad, angulate, and occasionally sub-angulate. Spire very low or flat, sometimes moderate height, outline slightly concave to slightly convex. Body whorl with weak spiral ribs above base, obsolete in larger specimens.</p><p>Ground colour white to cream, body whorl with spiral rows of rounded or squarish, reddish brown spots or sometimes short axial streaks from base to shoulder, these sometimes in alternating large and small series; shoulder and spire with many narrow revolving dark brown broader lines on white. Aperture relatively narrow, slightly wider anteriorly. Periostracum greenish-brown, smooth and very thick. Siphon ends with a black band on a white background.</p><p>Distribution. The only report of C. leopardus from India is that of Röckel et al. (1995). The specimens from Gulf of Mannar (Table 6) were collected by trawling in 9 to 40 m and from lobster cages laid at depths of 3 to 5 m.</p><p>Remarks. The restricted distribution of C. leopardus to the Gulf of Mannar agrees with earlier reports of its preference for vast subtidal stretches of sand and reef flats (Cernohorsky, 1964; Kohn &amp; Nybakken 1975). We collected a large number of specimens from lobster cages at Vedhalai and Keelakarai. Fishermen engaged in diving and lobster fishing reported the occurrence of C. leopardus within the rocky crevices.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF98A53BCFBAC74AFB68A544	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9BA53BCFBAC3E7FB46A1F9.text	03A287BEFF9BA53BCFBAC3E7FB46A1F9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus litoglyphus Hwass	<div><p>32. Conus litoglyphus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 33)</p><p>Conus litoglyphus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 692–693, no. 81 (lectotype, MHNG (52 x 29 mm) (Walls 1979); "les mers des grandes Indes").</p><p>Cucullus cinamomeus Röding, 1798: 43, no. 534 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 57, fig. 631 (50 x 23 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus orleanus Röding, 1798: 44, no. 558 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 140, fig. 1298 (37 x 20 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus bicolor Sowerby II, 1833: pt. 24, fig. 2 (representation of lectotype, Sowerby I 1833: pl. 24, fig. 2 (18 x 10 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus albomaculatus Sowerby II, 1841: pls. 177–184 (representation of lectotype, Sowerby II, 1833: pl. 24, fig. 2 (17.5 x 9.5 mm); " Moluccas, Indonesia ").</p><p>Conus lacinulatus Kiener, 1845: pl. 108, fig. 2.</p><p>Conus carpenteri Crosse, 1865: 302–303, pl. 9, fig. 1 (holotype, BMNH (46.5 x 25 mm); " Nova Guinea, Oceaniae ").</p><p>Conus (Rhizoconus) seychellensis Nevill &amp; Nevill, 1874: 22 (holotype, ZSI (SL 38.5 mm); " Seychelle Islands ").</p><p>Conus inermis Tinker, 1952: pl. 178.</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 132, 1 specimen, SL 46 mm; SW 24 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, solid, glossy. Body whorl conical, outline straight. Body whorl with widely spaced, partially granulose, spiral ribs basally. Shoulder broad, sub-angulate. Spire low, sides straight, whorls flat; early whorl eroded. Aperture uniformly narrow; outer lip thin, straight.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl overlaid with brownish, leaving spiral white bands at shoulder and below centre. White bands solid, irregularly interrupted by axial colour markings. Base dark brown. Spire mostly brown covered with triangular white spots, early whorls whitish. Aperture white, dark brown at base.</p><p>Distribution. Except for the report of Röckel et al. (1995) from the Gulf of Mannar, no previous report is available on C. litoglyphus from India.</p><p>The specimen described herein was collected from Mandapam (Table 6) by trawling in 10–30 m.</p><p>Remarks. This is the second record from India after the report by Röckel et al. (1995). Kohn (1978) considered this species as unconfirmed from India, as it was reported only once. The occurrence of this species was verified by Röckel et al. (1995) and added in the list of conidae of India by Kohn (2001).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9BA53BCFBAC3E7FB46A1F9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9AA53ACFBAC0C7FD3CA277.text	03A287BEFF9AA53ACFBAC0C7FD3CA277.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus lividus Hwass	<div><p>33. Conus lividus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 34)</p><p>Conus lividus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 630–632, no. 28 (lectotype, MHNG (43 x 26 mm) (Kohn 1968); "isles Antilles").</p><p>Cucullus monachos Röding, 1792: 39, no. 490 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 63, fig. 694 (47 x 28 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus plebejus Link, 1807: 106 (lectotype, same as for C. monachos Röding).</p><p>Conus primula Reeve, 1849: pl. 6, no. 259 (type, BMNH (31 x 18 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 133, 22 specimens, SL 24–48 mm; SW 12–29 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell small to moderately large, solid to heavy. Body whorl broadly conical; outline almost straight. Shoulder angulate, strongly to weakly tuberculate. Spire of low to moderate height, outline straight to slightly concave. Body whorl with variably granulose spiral ribs above base, sometimes to centre.</p><p>Body whorl olive to brownish yellow, with pale or white transverse bands at centre and below shoulder. Base dark violet-brown. Apex usually pink. Late spire whorls and shoulder white, sometimes with paler ground colour of body whorl between tubercles. Aperture deep purple-violet, behind narrow orange-brown margin, with pale band at centre and shoulder. Periostracum yellowish-brown, opaque and smooth with fine axial ridges.</p><p>Distribution. Satyamurti (1952) reported this species from Shingle Island of Gulf of Mannar. Kohn (1978) has referred to a specimen deposited in ZMUC as being obtained off Tranquebar. Röckel et al. (1995) reported a specimen from south India.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Gulf of Mannar (Table 6) by trawling in 10–30 m. Specimens were found to be comparatively abundant at Keelakarai .</p><p>Remarks. The distribution of C. lividus is restricted to the Gulf of Mannar. The occurrence of a larger number of specimens from Keelakarai may be associated with the fact that they generally inhabit the edges of the fringing reefs of the nearby coral islands.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9AA53ACFBAC0C7FD3CA277	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9AA53ACFBAC4F5FAB3A1FC.text	03A287BEFF9AA53ACFBAC4F5FAB3A1FC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus longurionis Kiener 1845	<div><p>34. Conus longurionis Kiener, 1845 (Figure 35)</p><p>Conus longurionis Kiener, 1845: pl. 92, fig. 6 (type, Coll. Prevost (33 x 10 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown). Conus kantanganus da Motta, 1982: 11–12, figs. 10a, b (holotype, MHNG (33 x 10 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off the coast of Kantang, South West Thailand in the Andaman Sea").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 134, 1 specimen, SL 37 mm; SW 12 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small to medium sized, light. Body whorl usually narrowly conical, outline nearly straight. Shoulder sub-angulate, exhalent notch deep. Spire high, outline almost straight. First 3–10 post nuclear whorls tuberculate and distinct, sutures deep and wide. Body whorl with regularly spaced, axial striate spiral grooves and ribbons. Aperture long, narrow and slightly wide anteriorly.</p><p>Ground colour light brown. Body whorl with spiral rows of regular large brown dots on ribbons, partly fusing into irregularly sized axial flecks that cluster into spiral bands above and below centre. A weaker spiral band around shoulder. Aperture pale lavender.</p><p>Distribution. The earliest published record of C. longurionis from India was from Gulf of Mannar (Thurston 1985). Subsequent records are from Madras (at AMNH) and Tranquebar (at ZMUC) (Kohn 1978).</p><p>The specimen reported herein was collected from the trash dumped on the fish-landing centre off Madras (Table 6).</p><p>Remarks. Specimens from India and West Thailand were described as C. kantanganus (Röckel et al. 1995) . C. kantanganus and the similar shells from Thailand and Philippines cannot be separated from C. longurionis at the species level and are considered geographical forms (Röckel et al. 1995). Since the shell characters of the specimens from Madras agree well with C. kantanganus, it is treated as C. longurionis .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9AA53ACFBAC4F5FAB3A1FC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9DA53DCFBAC0C7FBDCA037.text	03A287BEFF9DA53DCFBAC0C7FBDCA037.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus loroisii Kiener 1845	<div><p>35. Conus loroisii Kiener, 1845 (Figure 36)</p><p>Conus loroisii Kiener, 1845: pl. 65, fig. 1 (types, Coll. Lorois and Coll. Boivin; "la mer de 1’ Inde ").</p><p>Conus (Dentroconus) agrestis Morch, 1850: 16, 31, no. 405 (paratype, ZMUC (76 x 49.5 mm) (Coomans et al. 1979b); "Insulas Nicobaricus").</p><p>Conus huberorum da Motta, 1989: 9–11, no. 2 (holotype, MHNG (48 x 24.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off the Coromandel Coast, Bay of Bengal, northward from Madras, India ").</p><p>Conus figulinus var. insignis Dautzenberg, 1937: pl. 1, fig. 6 (type, IRSN (75 x 48 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Amboine").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 135, 142 specimens, SL 30–92 mm; SW 16–56 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, solid to heavy. Body whorl usually ventricosely conical; outline convex adapically, straight toward base. Shoulder subangulate to rounded. Spire low to moderate height; outline variably concave. Basal third of last whorl with variably spaced spiral grooves separating ribs and ribbons.</p><p>Ground colour grey mixed with pale blue, brown and violet in some. Colours arranged in blending spiral and axial zones. Body whorl with contrasting light narrow spiral bands at shoulder and below centre; shoulder band always present but often very narrow and inconspicuous. Solid or interrupted reddish to blackish brown lines occur infrequently on body whorl. Aperture usually white to bluish-white, sometimes reddish-brown. Periostracum brown, fairly thick, opaque with raised spiral ridges corresponding in position to the larger dark transverse lines on the shell.</p><p>Distribution. India is the type locality of C. loroisii (Kiener 1847) . Kohn (1978) observed its occurrence from Madras to PortoNovo on the east coast. Röckel et al. (1995) reported its distribution from the north and south of Madras to Vizhagapattinam and Cuddalore, suggesting its occurrence only on the east coast of India. However, Kohn (1978) reported specimens of C. loroisii in the BMNH labeled with Bombay, west coast of India.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from various stations (Table 6) of the TamilNadu Coast by trawling in 5–50 m.</p><p>Remarks. Conus loroisii and C. figulinus appear similar, and both the species are sympatric in the northern Indian Ocean and Philippines and their specific characters either coincide or overlap as described previously. The absence of further records of C. loroisii from India was probably due to consideration of C. figulinus as conspecific (Kohn 1978). Röckel et al. (1995) considered C. loroisii a distinct species.</p><p>The present study extended the distribution of this species from Vizhagapattinam down south to Tuticorin.</p><p>Several species of sea anemones are often found attached to the shells of C. loroisii (see Figure 62K). Kohn (1978) reported that the association of sea anemones with living C. loroisii was hitherto unknown. Conus loroisii is usually found along with C. betulinus, C. figulinus and C. amadis and also with other gastropods such as turrids, Hemifusus pugilinus Born and Babylonia spirata Linnaeus.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9DA53DCFBAC0C7FBDCA037	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9DA53CCFBAC605FBB8A4C1.text	03A287BEFF9DA53CCFBAC605FBB8A4C1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus madagascariensis Sowerby II 1858	<div><p>36. Conus madagascariensis Sowerby II, 1858 (Figure 37)</p><p>Conus madagascariensis Sowerby II, 1858: 43, sp. 371, pl. 24, fig. 582 (three syntypes, BMNH (44 x 22; 42 x 23.5; 38.5 x 20.5 mm); " Madagascar ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 136, 6 specimens, SL 42–68 mm; SW 18–29 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to moderately large, moderately solid. Body whorl ventricosely conical to conoid-cylindrical; outline moderately convex at adapical third, straight below; left side often slightly concave near base. Aperture somewhat wider at base than near shoulder. Shoulder angulate. Spire low, outline slightly concave to slightly sigmoid, with a straight sided apex. Body whorl with weak spiral ridges on basal third.</p><p>Ground colour white, often variably tinged with violet, sometimes more prominently so at base. Body whorl with rather fine and regular network of dark brown lines edging numerous tiny to medium sized white tents. Overlying light brown to reddish brown spiral streaks, spots, flecks or blotches generally arranged in interrupted spiral bands on each side of centre and interspersed with spiral lines of alternating darker brown and white markings. Aperture white. Periostracum yellow, thin, translucent and smooth.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) first reported C. madagascariensis (as ‘ C. pennaceus Born’) from India, citing Hare Island, Tuticorin. He has also referred to a museum specimen (in BMNH) collected from there. C. madagascariensis is restricted to south India (Röckel et al. 1995).</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Gulf of Mannar by trawling in 9–30 m around the fringe coral reef islands and a large number of specimens from Kanyakumari by trawling in 20–50 m (Table 6) .</p><p>Remarks. Specimens of C. madagascariensis are often difficult to distinguish from C. pennaceus . However, the consistently straight-sided apex and rather uniformly reticulate pattern on the body whorl of C. madagascariensis distinguishes the latter. Although previously reported only from Tuticorin, during the three years of this survey not even a single specimen was encountered at Tuticorin.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9DA53CCFBAC605FBB8A4C1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9CA53CCFBAC36FFC1FA1E7.text	03A287BEFF9CA53CCFBAC36FFC1FA1E7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus malacanus Hwass	<div><p>37. Conus malacanus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 38)</p><p>Conus malacanus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 645, no. 43 (representation of holotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 325, fig. 9 (53 x 31 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Pres du dètroit de Malacca ").</p><p>Conus canaliculatus Dillwyn, 1817: pl. 325, fig. 9 (lectotype same as holotype of C. malacanus (Walls 1979); "the coasts of Ceylon, and the Nicobar Islands. Chemnitz. Straits of Malacca. Bruguière").</p><p>Conus subcarinatus Sowerby II, 1865: 518, pl. 32, figs. 12, 13 (two syntypes, BMNH (45 x 25; 40 x 23 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus cuneatus Sowerby III, 1873: 146, pl. 15, fig. 5 (holotype, ZMA (33 x 20 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Nicobar Islands ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 137, 81 specimens, SL 42–68 mm; SW 22–36 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to moderately large, solid to heavy. Body whorl conical to broadly conical; outline variably convex at adapical third, straight below. Shoulder broad and carinate. Spire of low to moderate height; outline concave to straight; early whorls forming a small projecting cone. Body whorl smooth except for a few weak spiral ridges above base.</p><p>Ground colour white, body whorl usually with two variably broad continuous or interrupted brown spiral bands, leaving white zones below shoulder at centre and at base. Several widely spaced narrow axial stripes may be continuous from shoulder to base, or interrupted at mid-body. Spire and shoulder whitish, sparsely or heavily marked with brownish blotches and curved streaks, early whorls pale brown. Aperture moderately wide, uniform in width; outer lip thin, straight. Aperture white or sometimes cream. Periostracum yellow, thin, smooth and translucent.</p><p>Distribution. Gravely (1942) reported C. malacanus (as ‘ C. voluminalis Hinds’) from Madras. Kohn (1978) collected a live specimen from PortoNovo. He also reported museum specimens collected off Ennore (at Madras), Karaikal (at IRSN) and Tranquebar (at ZMUC).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from the Northern and Palk Bay regions (Table 6) by trawling in 8–50 m, mainly on sand and sandy-mud bottoms.</p><p>Remarks. Kohn (1978) stated that the distribution of C. malacanus is restricted to the east coast. In this survey we observed this species is limited to the Northern and Palk Bay regions. Its absence in the Gulf of Mannar and further south probably suggests that it is not a coral-associated species. It often occurs in the same habitat as like C. monile, C. bayani, C. amadis and C. betulinus .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9CA53CCFBAC36FFC1FA1E7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9FA53FCFBAC0C7FC06A2C7.text	03A287BEFF9FA53FCFBAC0C7FC06A2C7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus marmoreus Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>38. Conus marmoreus Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 39)</p><p>Conus marmoreus Linnaeus, 1758: 712, no. 250 (lectotype, LSL (51 x 28 mm) (Walls 1979); "Asia").</p><p>Cucullus proarchithalassus Röding, 1798: 38, no. 470 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 62, fig. 686 (56 x 33 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus maculatus Perry, 1811: pl. 24, fig. 24 (representation of holotype, Perry 1811: pl. 24, fig. 4 (76 x 45 mm) (Kohn 1986); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus marmoreu s var. granulatus Sowerby I, 1839: pt. 155/156, fig. 120 (representation of lectotype, Sowerby I 1839: pt. 155/156, fig. 120 (30 x 17 mm) (Kohn 1992); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus crosseanus Bernardi, 1861: 168–169, pl. 6, figs. 3, 4 (lectotype, BMNH (69 x 39.5 mm) (Coomans et al. 1985a); " Nova Caledonia ").</p><p>Conus suffusus Sowerby III, 1870: 255–256, pl. 22, fig. 9 (holotype, BMNH (55 x 33 mm); " New Caledonia ").</p><p>Conus suffusus var. noumeeni s Crosse, 1872: 155–156, pl. 16, fig. 2 (type, Coll. Marie?; "Noumea, Novae Caledoniae").</p><p>Conus pseudomarmoreus Crosse, 1875: 223–225, pl. 9, fig. 4 (holotype, MNHN (50.5 x 30 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus crosseanus var. lineata Crosse, 1878: 168, pl. 3, figs. 3, 3a (type, BMNH 65 x 37 mm (Röckel et al. 1995); " Nova Caledonia ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS138, 2 specimens, SL 62–85 mm; SW 30–42 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, moderately solid to heavy. Body whorl conical, sides straight. About ten to twelve weak and closely spaced spiral ridges above the base. Body whorl with weak regularly spaced spiral ribs on basal fourth to half. Shoulder angulate, strongly tuberculate; spire low, outline straight.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl with a regular network of black lines and triangular to rhomboid areas, outlining white tents that are quite uniform in shape and arrangement and usually separate from each other. In live specimen apex is purplish red. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Frauenfeld (1869) first reported this species from Madras. Subsequently, Thurston (1890, 1895) and Satyamurti (1952) reported it from Pamban. Along the west coast, it was recorded from the Malabar Coast (Weinkauff, 1875).</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Keelakarai and Tuticorin (Table 6) by trawling in 10– 20 m, close to the fringing coral islands of the Gulf of Mannar .</p><p>Remarks. Appears to be a rare species along the Indian Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9FA53FCFBAC0C7FC06A2C7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9FA53FCFBAC512FD08A1EC.text	03A287BEFF9FA53FCFBAC512FD08A1EC.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus miles Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>39. Conus miles Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 40)</p><p>Conus miles Linnaeus, 1758: 713, no. 255 (lectotype, LSL (53 x 31 mm) (Kohn 1963); " India ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 139, 1 specimen, SL 45 mm; SW 24 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large, solid, glossy; outline broadly conical. Shoulder angulate, broad, weakly undulate. Spire of moderate height, bluntly pointed; outline straight. Body whorl smooth except widely spaced spiral ribs on basal third and few spiral threads in between. Aperture moderately wide, uniform in width; outer lip thin and sharp.</p><p>Ground colour dull white. Body whorl with a narrower light-brown spiral band above centre, also wider deep solid brown band on basal fourth to third, remaining areas clouded with lighter brown crossed by well separated fine orange axial lines that extend to shoulder ramp. Spire white, covered with fine orange brown axial lines, early whorls badly eroded, white. Aperture translucent.</p><p>Distribution. We obtained a specimen from Pamban (Table 6) by trawling in 10– 20 m.</p><p>Remarks. Linnaeus gave the type locality of this species as ‘India’ (Röckel et al. 1995) without precise locality data. This record appears to be first to give the exact locality of C. miles in India. This species is extremely rare along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9FA53FCFBAC512FD08A1EC	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9EA53ECFBAC0C7FE51A371.text	03A287BEFF9EA53ECFBAC0C7FE51A371.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus milneedwardsi Jousseaume 1894	<div><p>40. Conus milneedwardsi Jousseaume, 1894 (Figure 41)</p><p>Conus milneedwardsi Jousseaume, 1894: 99 (holotype, MNHN (46 x 14 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Aden").</p><p>Conus (Cylinder) clytospira Melvill &amp; Standen, 1899b: 461–463 (lectotype, BMNH (107 x 32 mm) (Coomans et al. 1985a); "Arabian Sea, about 125 miles WSW of Bombay, long. 71° 30’ to 71° 45’E, lat. 18° 43’N ").</p><p>Leptoconus kawamurai Habe, 1962: 117, pl. 37, fig. 15 (holotype, NSMT (80.5 x 33.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Amami and Ryukyu Islands").</p><p>Conus lemuriensis Wils &amp; Delsaerdt, 1989: 105–110, figs. 1–3, 7, 12 (holotype, KBIN (110.5 x 35.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Réunion Islands, La Souris Chaude").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS140, 3 specimens, SL 85–120 mm; SW 24–35 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large, thin, heavy, glossy; body whorl narrowly conical with elevated spire, about one-third of total length; bluntly pointed, with somewhat concave sides. Spire whorls strongly stepped. Depth of exhalent notch in the largest shell is about 2/5 th of maximum diameter of the last whorl. Shoulder narrow, angulate; outline generally straight. Aperture narrow; slightly wider basally, upper edge of the outer lip strongly sloping below shoulder; outer lip rather thin, concave at centre.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl generally with reddish brown reticulated lines forming small to large triangles and with similarly coloured triangular spots to variably shaped blotches concentrated in two spiral bands, within basal third, and just above centre. Spire whorls with large reddish brown regular blotches. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Two specimens of C. milneedwardsi (as ‘ C. clytospira ’) were reported from Bombay by Melvill &amp; Standen (1899b, 1901). Kohn (1978) remarked that this species occurs around the margin of the Arabian Sea in the western Indian Ocean.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Pamban and Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 30– 80 m. This appears to extend the distribution from the west to east coast of India .</p><p>Remarks. The shell of this species is reported to be moderately solid to solid (Walls 1979 &amp; Röckel et al. 1995). All the three specimens collected in this study had relatively thin shells. Depth of exhalent notch is about 1/4 of the diameter of the last whorl. In contrast, the earlier records state that the depth ranges from 1/3 to 2/5 of the diameter.</p><p>Compared to the earlier record from Madras, east coast (102 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995), the present specimen collected from Keelakarai is larger (120 mm). Like C. bengalensis this species is also in high demand by collectors due to its rarity.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9EA53ECFBAC0C7FE51A371	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF9EA531CFBAC5E0FCB0A709.text	03A287BEFF9EA531CFBAC5E0FCB0A709.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus mitratus Hwass	<div><p>41. Conus mitratus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 42)</p><p>Conus mitratus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 738, no. 132 (lectotype, MHNG (43 x 15 mm) (Walls 1979); "Ocean indien"). Conus mitratus var. pupaeformis Sowerby III, 1870: 256, pl. 22, fig. 2 (" Mauritius ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 141, 1 specimen, SL 41 mm; SW 13 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, thick, moderately light, glossy. Body whorl elongate and cylindrical. Shoulder indistinct. Spire high; outline convex, sharply pointed; earliest two to three whorls with fine nodules, later whorls with indistinct spiral ridges often bearing small granules. Body whorl with granulose spiral ribs from base to anterior half of the body whorl. Aperture narrow, slightly widened anteriorly; outer lip thick slightly convex.</p><p>Ground colour yellowish. Body whorl with dark brown, blurred axial streaks and blotches. Pattern elements fusing into a spiral band at centre and similar but narrower band above base. Apex white. Shoulder edges of early post nuclear whorls including tubercles with brown band. Aperture white, external visible through at margin.</p><p>Distribution. Conus mitratus has not been reported previously from India.</p><p>The specimen reported herein was collected from Tuticorin (Table 6) by trawling in 10–30 m, associated with coarse sand.</p><p>Remarks. This is an extremely rare species in India.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF9EA531CFBAC5E0FCB0A709	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF91A531CFBAC1D7FAC6A3AF.text	03A287BEFF91A531CFBAC1D7FAC6A3AF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus monile Hwass	<div><p>42. Conus monile Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 43)</p><p>Conus monile Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 646–647, no. 45 (lectotype, MHNG (70 x 36 mm) (Kohn 1968); "Ocean Asiatique").</p><p>Cucullus cereolus Röding, 1798: 44, no. 557/67 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 140, fig. 1301 (52 x 25 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS142, 157 specimens, SL 66–120 mm; SW 35–42 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium to large, moderately heavy, and conical with high gloss; sides nearly straight. Body whorl conical, outline variably convex over adapical fourth to third and straight below. Body whorl with a few weak spiral ridges above the base and sometimes conspicuous axial threads. Shoulder broad, carinate to angulate, concave above. Spire of low to moderate height.</p><p>Ground colour white or cream. Body whorl suffused or spirally banded with pale orange or pink. Spiral rows of brown dots, dashes and variously shaped spots extend from base to shoulder but vary in number and arrangement, often concentrated at both sides of the centre. Sometimes dark markings fuse into axial flames or blotches. Base pale orange or brown. Aperture white. Periostracum yellowish brown, thin, translucent to opaque, smooth or with fine axial ridges.</p><p>Distribution. Gravely (1942) first reported this species from Madras. Subsequently, Hornell (1949) recorded it from India without giving precise locality data. Kohn (1978) collected two specimens trawled off PortoNovo. He also reported museum specimens dredged off Madras (at MGM) and Tuticorin (at BMNH). Conus monile has also been recorded from Bombay along the west coast (Subrahmanyam et al. 1952).</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from various stations (Table 6) of the TamilNadu Coast by trawling in 9–40 m, mainly on sand and sandy-mud bottoms. However, at Periyakuppam it was collected in 5– 15 m.</p><p>Remarks. Although the shell shape is generally uniform, few specimens showed markedly elevated spire, and there is considerable variation in the colour pattern of the body whorl (Figure 62O). The occurrence of this species around the northern region suggests its preference for shallow sand and sandy-mud bottoms.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF91A531CFBAC1D7FAC6A3AF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF91A530CFBAC5BAFE46A439.text	03A287BEFF91A530CFBAC5BAFE46A439.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus nussatella Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>43. Conus nussatella Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 44)</p><p>Conus nussatella Linnaeus, 1758: 716, no. 273 (lectotype, LSL (49 x 18 mm) (Kohn 1963); "Nussatello Insulam, Asiae").</p><p>Conus nussatella var. tenuis Sowerby I, 1834: pt. 54, fig. 62 (representation of lectotype, Sowerby I 1834: pt. 54, fig. 62 (35 x 12 mm) (Kohn 1992); "ad Insulam Annaa").</p><p>Hermes kawanishii Shikama, 1970: 26–27, pl. 1, fig. 28 (holotype, GIYU (36.5 x 13.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 143, 1 specimen, SL 54 mm; SW 20 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium-sized, moderately solid. Body whorl narrowly cylindrical; outline straight, parallel-sided at upper two thirds. Shoulder indistinct. Spire of moderate height, outline convex. Body whorl with fine, weakly granulose spiral ribs from base to shoulder; intervening grooves spirally striate. Aperture wide at base than near shoulder; outer lip straight, sharp and thick.</p><p>Ground colour light cream with spiral rows of small dark brown spots and variably sized orange brown axial blotches coalescing axially as well as spirally, especially concentrating above and below the centre. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Conus nussatella has been recorded from Madras (Melvill &amp; Standen, 1898) and Shingle Island (Satyamurti 1952). Kohn (1978) collected an empty shell from Ohka and also reported one specimen in ANSP trawled off south India by fishermen.</p><p>A specimen reported herein from Tuticorin (Table 6) was collected from the trash discard. The depth and nature of substratum was not known.</p><p>Remarks. Although known to be present on both east and west coasts, this species appears to be very rare along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF91A530CFBAC5BAFE46A439	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF90A530CFBAC227FADDA31F.text	03A287BEFF90A530CFBAC227FADDA31F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus pertusus Hwass	<div><p>44. Conus pertusus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 45)</p><p>Conus pertusus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 686–687, no. 75 (lectotype, MHNG (50.5 x 24.5 mm) (Walls 1979); "les mers des grandes Indes").</p><p>Conus amabilis Lamarck, 1810: 425, no. 137 (lectotype, MHNG (29 x 16 mm) (Kohn 1981); "Mers des grandes Indes").</p><p>Conus festivus Dillwyn, 1817: 413, no. 116 (lectotype, ZMUC (23x 13 mm) (Kohn 1986); "Molucca Islands").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS144, 3 specimens, SL 40–45 mm; SW 25–28 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small and moderately heavy with high gloss. Body whorl conical, outline convex just below shoulder, straight below. Shoulder angulate. Spire of moderate height, outline convex, apex sharp. Aperture narrow, slightly wider anteriorly; outer lip thin, sharp, and straight. Body whorl smooth except for a few weak spiral ribs at base.</p><p>Ground colour white, body whorl with orange red blotches fusing into two variably broad spiral bands on each side of the centre. Adapical and central white bands crossed by axial blotches. Aperture pale pink.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (2001) first reported this species from India without giving precise locality data.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Mandapam and Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 8–20 m, around coral islands of Gulf of Mannar .</p><p>Remarks. Except Kohn (2001), no previous record of C. pertusus is known from India. This species is probably restricted to the Gulf of Mannar and appears to be a rare species along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF90A530CFBAC227FADDA31F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF90A533CFBAC5CAFE46A759.text	03A287BEFF90A533CFBAC5CAFE46A759.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus praecellens A. Adams 1854	<div><p>45. Conus praecellens A. Adams, 1854 (Figure 46)</p><p>Conus praecellens A. Adams, 1854: 119 (type, BMNH (35 x 15 mm); " China Seas ").</p><p>Conus bicolor Sowerby I, 1833: pt. 24, fig. 2 (representation of lectotype, Sowerby I 1833: pt. 37, fig. 56 (36 x 18 mm) (Kohn 1992); " China ").</p><p>Conus sinensis Sowerby II, 1841: 174–188 .</p><p>Conus sowerbii Reeve, 1849: 2 (type, BMNH (36 x 15 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus sowerbyi Sowerby II, 1857: 12 ("Feejee Islands").</p><p>Conus sowerbyi var. subaequalis Sowerby III, 1870: 257, pl. 22, fig. 5 (" China Seas").</p><p>Materials examined: MBMCS145, 1 specimen, SL 38 mm; SW 16 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small, solid and bi-conic. Body whorl conical, outline convex adapically, slightly concave below. Shoulder carinate, with a moderately deep exhalent notch. Spire high, over 1/3 of the entire length, sharply pointed, stepped, outline slightly concave. Body whorl with punctuates or axially striate, spiral grooves of variable width separated by strong ribbons. Aperture narrow, uniformly wide; outer lip thin and straight.</p><p>Ground colour dull white. Body whorl with spiral rows of dark brown dots and bars on ribbons and fusing into two to three spiral bands, below shoulder and on both sides of the centre. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Röckel et al. (1995) reported a specimen from Madras.</p><p>We collected a specimen from Cuddalore (Table 6) by trawling in 20–40 m mainly on sandy-mud bottom.</p><p>Remarks. This is the second record from India; C. praecellens appears to be an extremely rare species along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF90A533CFBAC5CAFE46A759	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF93A533CFBAC187FAE8A367.text	03A287BEFF93A533CFBAC187FAE8A367.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus pretiosus Nevill and Nevill 1874	<div><p>46. Conus pretiosus Nevill and Nevill, 1874 (Figure 47)</p><p>Conus pretiosus Nevill &amp; Nevill, 1874: 22 (holotype, ZSI (59.5 x 24 mm); "Andamans").</p><p>Conus phuketensis da Motta, 1978: 4, fig. 2.pl. 67 (holotype, MHNG (81 x 33 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off the coastal waters from Phuket Islands South West Thailand westward toward the Andaman Islands in the Andaman Sea").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS146, 4 specimens, SL 48–80 mm; SW 21–33 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large to large, moderately solid. Body whorl ventricosely conical, outline convex adapically and straight below. Shoulder angulate. Spire of moderate height, stepped, outline straight, apex pointed and sharp. Body whorl smooth. Outer lip thin and sharp. Periostracum thin and translucent.</p><p>Ground colour white to cream. Body whorl with narrow brown (cream to yellowish brown) spiral bands from base to shoulder. Overlying spiral rows of variously sized and shaped brown to dark brown markings fuse into variably prominent interrupted spiral bands, below shoulder and above centre. Spire whorls white to brown, early whorls white to pale brown. Post nuclear sutural ramps white or cream with brown radial streaks and blotches. Aperture pale pinkish; exterior pattern visible on the outer lip margin. Periostracum brown and translucent.</p><p>Distribution. Nevill &amp; Nevill (1874) reported this species for the first time from the Andaman Islands. Röckel et al. (1995) recorded one specimen from Tuticorin and another from Bay of Bengal; the exact locality of the latter was not given.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Keelakarai and Pamban (Table 6) by trawling in 40– 60 m.</p><p>Remarks. Conus pretiosus is extremely rare and probably restricted to Gulf of Mannar. Fishermen of Pamban consider it a rare species and differentiate it from other cones by naming it as ‘Pamban vallapoo’.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF93A533CFBAC187FAE8A367	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF93A532CFBAC5F2FD71A499.text	03A287BEFF93A532CFBAC5F2FD71A499.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus quercinus	<div><p>47. Conus quercinus [Lightfoot], 1786 (Figure 48)</p><p>Conus quercinus [Lightfoot], 1786: pl. 67, no. 1501 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 59, fig. 657 (54 x 38 mm) (Kohn 1964); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus cingulum Gmelin, 1791: 3378, no. 72 ("Insulas amicas").</p><p>Conus quercinus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 681–682, no. 71 (lectotype, MHNG (82.5 x 55 mm) (Kohn 1968); "des Indes orientales").</p><p>Conus buxeus Link, 1817: 99 (representation of holotype, Martini 1773: pl. 59, fig. 657 (72 x 50 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus akabensis Sowerby III, 1887: 273, sp. 528, pl. 36, figs. 752, 753 (holotype, BMNH (44 x 23 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Akaba (Red Sea)").</p><p>Conus egregious Sowerby III, 1914: 475–476, pl. 19, fig. 9 (holotype in BMNH (3.5 x 2 mm); " New Caledonia ").</p><p>Conus quercinus var. albus Shaw, 1915: 210 (holotype, BMNH (58 x 34 mm); "Aden").</p><p>Conus fulvostriatus Fenaux, 1942: 2, fig. 4 ("Bourbon").</p><p>Conus albonerosa Garrard, 1966: 11–12, pl. 1, fig. 1 (holotype, AMS (110 x 62 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off Wide Bay, southern Queensland ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 147, 4 specimens, SL 48–53 mm; SW 32–34 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large, heavy, low gloss. Body whorl broadly conical; outline slightly convex adapically, straight below. Body whorl with few low spiral ridges above base, continuing as spiral threads above centre. Shoulder broad, sub-angulate. Spire of moderate height; outline slightly concave. Aperture wide, slightly flaring at base; outer lip straight and thick.</p><p>Ground colour pale yellow; a paler mid-body band visible. Spire uniformly yellowish white, early whorls dark brown. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Melvill &amp; Standen (1898) reported this species from the east coast of India (as ‘ C. ponderosus Beck’) without providing precise locality data. Kohn (1978) reported a museum specimen (in BMNH) collected by Winckworth from Tuticorin.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Vembar (Table 6) by trawling in 20–30 m, mainly on the sandy bottom. Few specimens were also collected from the trash discards at Tuticorin fishing harbour (Table 6).</p><p>Remarks. The earlier and present records suggest that C. quercinus is restricted to the east coast of India and appears to be rare along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF93A532CFBAC5F2FD71A499	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF92A532CFBAC347FF61A1EF.text	03A287BEFF92A532CFBAC347FF61A1EF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus rattus Hwass 1792	<div><p>48. Conus rattus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 49)</p><p>Conus rattus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 700, no. 89 (representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 338, fig. 7 (45 x 29 mm) (Kohn 1968); "les mers d’Amérique").</p><p>Conus taitensis Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 713, no. 108 (representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 336, fig. 9 (36 x 23 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Isle d’ Otaiti, dans 1’ Océan pacifique").</p><p>Conus chemnitzii Dillwyn, 1817: 363, no. 108 (representation of holotype, Chemnitz 1795: pl. 182, figs. 1764, 1765) (37 x 23 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Ceylon ").</p><p>Conus taheitensis Reeve, 1843: pl. 15, sp. 78.</p><p>Conus viridis Sowerby II, 1857: 20, pl. 5, fig. 102 (representation of lectotype, Sowerby II 1857: pl. 5, fig. 102 (22 x 12.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Hurghada, Egypte, Rode Zee ").</p><p>Conus semivelatus Sowerby III, 1882: 118, pl. 5, fig. 3 (holotype, NMWC (18 x 11.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Red Sea ").</p><p>Conus tahitiensis Dautzenberg, 1933: 89 ("Islands of Taheita, Annaa").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS148, 9 specimens, SL 28–56 mm; SW 13–25 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell small to moderately large, solid, glossy. Body whorl conical to broadly conical; outline variably convex at adapical third to three fourth, left side concave below. Shoulder angulate. Spire of low to moderate height, outline slightly convex. Body whorl with variably prominent fine spiral ribs at base, becoming obsolete adapically. Aperture narrow, outer lip thin.</p><p>Ground colour bluish-white. Body whorl overlaid with various shades of brown leaving a broad interrupted spiral ground-colour band below shoulder and another obsolete to broad band at centre. Solid dark brown spiral lines may extend from base to just below the shoulder; on some portions of the body whorl, brown spiral lines articulate with white dots to produce a speckled appearance. Base violet. Aperture violet. Periostracum yellowish brown, slightly opaque and transversely finely ridged.</p><p>Distribution. In India, the first record of C. rattus was based on a live specimen collected by Winckworth at Krusadai Island (Kohn 1978).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by trawling in 10–40 m and diving in 5–8 m, in and around the sub-tidal coral reef flats and from Pamban by trawling in 10–40 m (Table 6).</p><p>Remarks. This is the second record from India. Live specimens obtained by diving near subtidal coral reefs suggest its preference for this habitat. The distribution of C. rattus is probably limited to the Gulf of Mannar.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF92A532CFBAC347FF61A1EF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF95A535CFBAC0C7FCCAA02F.text	03A287BEFF95A535CFBAC0C7FCCAA02F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus striatus Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>49. Conus striatus Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 50)</p><p>Conus striatus Linnaeus, 1758: 716, no. 277 (lectotype, LSL (62 x 31 mm) (Kohn 1963); "Hitoe").</p><p>Conus leoninus [Lightfoot], 1786: 72, no. 1620 (representation of lectotype, Knorr 1768: pl. 12, fig. 5 (62 x 31.5 mm) (Kohn 1964); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus floridus Sowerby II, 1858: 47, fig. 558 (two syntypes, BMNH (77 x 44; 69 x 32 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus chusaki da Motta, 1978: figs. 6, 8 (holotype, MHNG (65 x 30 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "shorelines of Raya Island, Phuket ").</p><p>Conus subfloridus da Motta, 1985c: 27–28, figs. 4a, d (holotype, MNHG (76 x 35.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Gulf of Mannar between India and Srilanka").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS149, 60 specimens, SL 52–110 mm; SW 28–56 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, solid to heavy. Body whorl narrowly conoid-cylindrical. Outline convex to straight, straight below shoulder. Aperture wider at base than shoulder. Shoulder sharply angulate to carinate. Spire of low to moderate height, outline concave to slightly convex, stepped. Body whorl with closely spaced, generally fine spiral ribs on basal third, obsolete above, occasionally persisting to shoulder.</p><p>Ground colour white, with shades of pink or grey. Sometimes white, variably suffused with pale blue to purplish white. Body whorl with brown to black flecks, blotches, flames and axial streaks, usually concentrated in two interrupted to solid spiral bands, above and below centre. The bands contain solid, dashed or dotted darker spiral lines. Shells vary from almost completely white to heavily patterned.</p><p>Distribution: Thurston (1890, 1895) first reported C. striatus from Tuticorin. Subsequent records are from Rameswaram (Sundaram 1969) and Shingle Island (Kohn 1978). Specimens collected from Hare Island and Krusadai Island are in MGM and ANSP respectively (Kohn 1978). Röckel et al. (1995) reported C. striatus from Rameswaram.</p><p>We collected specimens of C. striatus in the vicinity of the coral islands (Table 6) by trawling in 6–50 m, on sand and coral rubble bottom. Diving in 5 m off Keelakarai yielded a few specimens. Specimens from Yerwadi and Keelakarai (Table 6) were collected from the lobster cages laid overnight at 5 m, in sandy and rocky bottoms.</p><p>Remarks. Richard (1990) treated both C. s. f. subfloridus and f. floridus as conspecific with each other, but separate from C. striatus, while other authors consider C. floridus to represent only a slight variant of C. striatus (Smith 1894) . In form floridus siphonal fasciole white to cream, with variably spaced very fine brown axial lines; form subfloridus without these lines. Aperture white to bluish in form subfloridus; in form floridus, orange deep within. Röckel et al. (1995) provisionally considered both to be ecological variants of C. striatus from deeper subtidal habitats.</p><p>We found C. striatus and C. s. f. subfloridus sympatrically at Keelakarai and they are very similar in shell shape and sculpture (Figure 62P). The specimens collected in this study are also considered conspecific with C. striatus following Röckel et al. (1995) and Kohn (2001).</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF95A535CFBAC0C7FCCAA02F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF95A534CFBAC63AFE0EA781.text	03A287BEFF95A534CFBAC63AFE0EA781.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus striolatus Kiener 1845	<div><p>50. Conus striolatus Kiener, 1845 (Figure 51)</p><p>Conus striolatus Kiener, 1845: pl. 105, fig. 1 (type, Coll. Bernardi; locality unknown);.</p><p>Conus magus var. decurtata Dautzenberg, 1910: 26 (lectotype, IRSN (28.5 x 16.5 mm) Coomans et al. 1985b); "L alle de Rua-Sura (Archipel Salomon)").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS150, 2 specimens, SL 22–24 mm; SW 13–14 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell small, solid. Body whorl ventricosely conical. Shoulder rounded. Spire of moderate height, outline straight. Body whorl with spiral ribs at base. Basal spiral ribs on both sides finely granulated, conspicuously prominent on the ventral side.</p><p>Ground colour pale grey. Body whorl with brown axial blotches, fusing into interrupted spiral bands on each side of centre. Spiral rows of alternating brown to black and white dots and dashes extend from base to shoulder. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Conus striolatus has not been previously reported from India.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Cuddalore (Table 6) by trawling in 10–40 m.</p><p>Remarks. The present report is the first record in India and this species is found to be a rare species along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF95A534CFBAC63AFE0EA781	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF94A534CFBAC1AFFCE9A2DF.text	03A287BEFF94A534CFBAC1AFFCE9A2DF.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus suratensis Hwass	<div><p>51. Conus suratensis Hwass in Bruguière, 1792 (Figure 52)</p><p>Conus suratensis Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 669–670, no. 63 (lectotype, MHNG (51.5 x 31.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "mers des grandes Indes").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS151, 6 specimens, SL 75–92 mm; SW 38–43 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell large, heavy and glossy. Body whorl usually ventricosely conical, outline convex over the adapical third, straight below. Shoulder subangulate to rounded. Spire low or flat, early whorl forming a small cone at the middle. Body whorl with about a dozen fairly weak spiral ridges above base, rest of whorl smooth except for fine spiral and axial threads and scratches. Aperture moderately wide, with uniform width, outer lip thick, sharp and straight.</p><p>Ground colour white to cream. Base pale orange, base and shoulder stained bright orange and yellow in some. Spiral rows of small dark brown dashes over most of the whorl, also aligned into axial bands; little fusion occurs between dashes axially. Spire white with orange tones. Aperture pale brown in colour.</p><p>Distribution. Röckel et al. (1995) reported this species off Cuddalore.</p><p>The specimens reorted herein were collected from Mandapam (Table 6) by trawling in 10–15 m, mainly on the sandy bottom.</p><p>Remarks. Conus suratensis is rare and probably restricted to the Gulf of Mannar. The present record of live specimens other than a single shell (70 mm) reported from Cuddalore (Röckel et al. 1995) is the first report from Gulf of Mannar and the largest (92 mm) recorded.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF94A534CFBAC1AFFCE9A2DF	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF94A537CFBAC50AFE37A4B1.text	03A287BEFF94A537CFBAC50AFE37A4B1.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus terebra Born 1778	<div><p>52. Conus terebra Born, 1778 (Figure 53)</p><p>Conus terebra Born, 1778: 145 (lectotype, NMW (55.5 x 25 mm) (Kohn 1964); " Fiji Islands ").</p><p>Conus terebellum Gmelin, 1791: 3390, no. 44 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 52, fig. 577 (48 x 22 mm) (Kohn 1976); "Indian Ocean").</p><p>Conus fusus Gmelin, 1791: 3390, no. 45 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 52, fig. 576 (19 x 10 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus albeolus Röding, 1798: 47, no. 594/91 (lectotype same as of C. terebellum Gmelin (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus coelebs Hinds, 1843: 256 (holotype, Coll. Belcher; "Ambow, Feejee Islands ").</p><p>Conus thomasi Sowerby III, 1881: 625–636, pl. 56, fig. 4 (Holotype, BMNH (72.5 x 36 mm); " Red Sea ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS152, 52 specimens, SL 58–92 mm; SW 24–40 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small to large with low gloss. Body whorl conical to narrowly conical; outline convex at shoulder, straight below, sometimes concave centrally. Shoulder rounded to roundly angled, not distinct from spire. Spire of moderate height, outline convex. Body whorl with variably spaced and variably fine spiral ribs from base to shoulder. The spiral ribs are generally closer near shoulder. Aperture narrow, slightly wider anteriorly; outer lip straight.</p><p>Ground colour white to pale cream. Body whorl with a broad spiral band on each side of the centre varying from light grey to light brown. Base tinged with violet in adult specimens. Aperture white, in adult pale or dull violet. Periostracum is persistent; dark brown, thick, opaque and axially ridged; darker and rough in large specimen.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) reported C. terebra off Krusadai Island. He also mentioned specimens collected from Tuticorin and Madras by Winckworth and Steiner respectively. Röckel et al. (1995) reported a single specimen from Pamban.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected from Keelakarai (Table 6) by diving in 5–10 m around coral reefs. In Vembar and Tuticorin (Table 6), specimens were collected by trawling in 20– 50 m.</p><p>Remarks. The present and previous records of this species are all from Gulf of Mannar. Thirty-two specimens were collected at shallow depths of sand bottoms at Keelakarai and Vembar. However, at Tuticorin they were collected at a maximum depth of 50 m. This species was often collected together with C. leopardus, C. virgo and C. araneosus .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF94A537CFBAC50AFE37A4B1	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF97A537CFBAC2BAFE6AA0C7.text	03A287BEFF97A537CFBAC2BAFE6AA0C7.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus tessulatus Born 1778	<div><p>53. Conus tessulatus Born, 1778 (Figure 54)</p><p>Conus tessulatus Born, 1778: 1780 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 59, fig. 653 (Kohn 1964); "Africa").</p><p>Cucullus pavimentum Röding, 1798: 41, no. 509/33 (lectotype same as that of C. tessulatus Born (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus edaphus Dall, 1910: 223–224 (holotype, USNM (24.5 x 14 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "off Clarion Island").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS153, 34 specimens, SL 32–70 mm; SW 26–45 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to moderately large, solid to moderately heavy. Body whorl conical to broadly conical, outline convex near shoulder, straight below. Shoulder broad, subangulate to angulate. Spire low to moderate height, sharply pointed, outline slightly concave. Aperture moderately narrow and with almost uniform width, outer lip sharp and straight. Body whorl with variously spaced, weak or incised or often punctuate spiral grooves on apical third.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl with spiral rows of mostly bright orange rectangular spots or bars, often alternating with white markings. These colour markings usually fuse into spiral bands in each side of the centre. Shoulder and spire with radial markings matching bars on last whorl in size and colour. Base bluish-white. Aperture white, usually with pink tones. Periostracum orange, thin and smooth.</p><p>Distribution. Bruguière (1792) first reported C. tessulatus from the Malabar coast. Dautzenberg (1937) noted a specimen from Madras (at IRSN). Röckel et al. (1995) reported a specimen from Madras and another from India without locality data. Kohn (1978) reported museum deposited specimens collected from Tuticorin (at BMNH) and Tranquebar (at ZMUC).</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected by trawling in 5–20 m from stations 4, 5 and 19 and at depths beyond 50 m from other stations (Table 6). In Keelakarai, specimens were collected by diving in 5–8 m on sand and coral rubble bottom.</p><p>Remarks. Conus tessulatus occurs generally at stations with the large fishing harbours. No depth data from Indian waters was available from the previous reports. However, in this study, C. tessulatus was mostly obtained at depths of 5– 50 m.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF97A537CFBAC2BAFE6AA0C7	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF97A529CFBAC712FF72A7E9.text	03A287BEFF97A529CFBAC712FF72A7E9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus textile Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>54. Conus textile Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 55)</p><p>Conus textile Linnaeus, 1758: 717, no. 278 (lectotype, LSL (67 x 33 mm) (Kohn 1963); "Banda").</p><p>Conus archiepiscopus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 747–748, no. 141 (lectotype, MHNG (68 x 36 mm) (Kohn 1968); "aux mers des grandes Indes").</p><p>Cucullus auriger Röding, 1798: 49, no. 632/119 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 54, fig. 599 (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus gloriamaris Röding, 1798: 49, no. 633/120 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 54, fig. 598 (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus auratus Röding, 1798: 5, no. 635/122 (representation of lectotype, Knorr 1764: pl. 8, fig. 3 (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus panniculus Lamarck, 1810: 435, no. 170 (type, MHNG (63 x 31 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Mers des grandes Indes").</p><p>Conus pyramidalis Lamarck, 1810: 438, no. 170 (representation of lectotype, Cuvier 1798: pl. 347, fig. 5 (56 x 19 mm) (Walls 1979); "Indes Orientales").</p><p>Conus gloriamaris Perry, 1810: pl. 16 (representation of holotype, Perry, 1810: pl. 16 (104 x 49 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "South Seas").</p><p>Conus reteaureum Perry, 1811: pl. 25, fig. 5 (representation of holotype, Perry 1811: pl. 25, fig. 5 (96 x 50 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "African Seas").</p><p>Conus (Textilia) communis Swainson, 1840: 312 (lectotype same as that of C. archiepiscopus Hwass (Coomans et al. 1985a)).</p><p>Conus verriculum Reeve, 1843: pl. 38, sp. 208a, b (type, Mus. Stainforth; " Ceylon ").</p><p>Conus textilinus Kiener, 1845: pl. 103, fig. 5 (holotype, NMWC (38.5 x 21.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus concatenatus Kiener, 1845: pl. 103, fig. 5.</p><p>Conus dilectus Gould, 1850: 172 (holotype, USNM (13 x 6 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Feejee Islands").</p><p>Conus scriptus Sowerby II, 1858: 41, no. 357, pl. 23, fig. 569 (three syntypes, BMNH (59 x 27; 54 x 22; 50 x 22 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus tigrinus Sowerby II, 1858: 41, no. 355, pl. 23, fig. 569 (type, BMNH (43 x 19 mm); " Madagascar ").</p><p>Conus corbula Sowerby II, 1858: 41, no. 365, pl. 23, fig. 573 (type, BMNH (69.5 x 34.5 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus textile var. euetrios Sowerby III, 1882: 12, fig. 13c (holotype, NMWC (49 x 24 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus cholmondeleyi Melvill, 1900: 308 (holotype, MM (43 x 18 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus eumitus Tomlin, 1926: 288–289, pl. 16, fig. 3 (lectotype, BMNH (53 x 28 mm); "Scottburgh").</p><p>Dariconus textiles osullivani Iredale, 1931: 224, pl. 25, fig. 13 (holotype, AMS (42.5 x 20 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Black Rock, Richmond River, New South Wales ").</p><p>Conus textile var. ponderosa Dautzenberg, 1932: 16 (type, IRSN (57 x 33.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Ste Marie").</p><p>Conus textile var. loman Dautzenberg, 1937: 257 (type, IRSN; "de 1’ île Maurice et de 1’ île Cargados ").</p><p>Conus sirventi Fenaux, 1943: 4, fig. 10 (" Madagascar ").</p><p>Conus textile dahlakensis da Motta, 1982: 5–6, pl figs. 5a, b (holotype, MHNG (87 x 40 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "in the area of Dahlak Archipelago, off Massawa in the Red Sea ").</p><p>Conus textile neovicarius da Motta, 1982: 4–5, pl figs. 4a, b (holotype, MHNG (76 x 45 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "in Sharem-el-Shech, Gulf of Aqueba ").</p><p>Conus suzannae van Rossum, 1990: 29–31 (holotype, van Rossum coll. (39 x 17.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); " Malindi coasts of Kenya, Indian Ocean").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS154, 26 specimens, SL 35–104 mm; SW 11–42 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, moderately light to moderately heavy, with high gloss. Body whorl ventricosely conical to ovate, outline strongly convex to nearly straight; left side straight to strongly concave near base. Shoulder usually rounded, but sometimes sharply angulate. Spire generally of moderate height, sides nearly straight to convex, sharply pointed. Aperture variably wider at base than near shoulder; outer lip sharp, slightly convex to nearly straight. Body whorl with variably weak spiral ribs near base.</p><p>Ground colour white, sometimes suffused with blue, violet, orange or pink. Body whorl generally with a network of light to dark brown lines edging tiny to moderately large tents, sometimes also small quadrangular to round markings. Yellowish-brown flecks and blotches arranged in two to three interrupted to solid spiral bands on both sides of the centre and often below shoulder; bands interspersed with broad, dark brown, straight to wavy axial lines. Occasionally one to two additional but similar but narrower spiral bands at base. Spire and shoulder whitish with many axial brown lines continued from body whorl. Aperture usually white to bluish white. Periostracum grey to yellow, thin, smooth and translucent.</p><p>Distribution. Conus textile has been reported from Madras (Frauenfeld 1869; Gravely 1942) to Tuticorin (Thurston 1890, 1895) on the east coast and from Ohka (Kohn 1978) to Bombay (Melvill &amp; Abercrombie 1893; Hornell &amp; Tomlin 1951; Subrahmanyam et al. 1952) on the west coast.</p><p>We collected specimens from several stations (Table 6) by trawling in 10– 80 m. In contrast, at stations 4, 5, 6 and 7, specimens were collected only at shallow depths of 10–20 m (Table 6).</p><p>Remarks. Conus textile shows wide variations in shape and colour patterns between and within stations along the TamilNadu Coast (Figure 62Q). Dead shells were rarely found in the trawl collection during this survey.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF97A529CFBAC712FF72A7E9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF89A529CFBAC277FF7AA381.text	03A287BEFF89A529CFBAC277FF7AA381.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus tuticorinensis Rockel & Korn 1990	<div><p>55. Conus tuticorinensis Röckel &amp; Korn, 1990 (Figure 56)</p><p>Conus tuticorinensis Röckel &amp; Korn, 1990: 277–291, pl. 2, fig. 2, pl. 2, fig. 1 (holotype, SMF (26 x 16.5 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); "Tuticorin, South East Indien ").</p><p>Material examined. MBMCS155, 1 specimen, SL 24 mm; SW 14 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell small, moderately solid. Body whorl broadly conical, outline convex adapically. Shoul- der angulate. Spire low, outline straight. Body whorl with flat spiral ribbons from base to shoulder.</p><p>Ground colour white, suffused with pale violet on last whorl. Body whorl with orange-brown “brick wall pattern” of about twelve spiral lines and irregular axial lines; similarly coloured irregular flecks spirally aligned below shoulder and each side of centre. Apex white. Aperture reddish white.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) first reported this species from India with reference to museum specimens collected by Winckworth from Tuticorin (at BMNH) and by Sukherwala from Tuticorin and Rameswaram (at AMNH). Röckel &amp; Korn (1990) reported on three specimens from Tuticorin.</p><p>The specimen described herein was collected from the dumped by-catch at Tuticorin fishing harbour (Table 6). The exact depth of occurrence and nature of bottom is not known.</p><p>Remarks. This species is extremely rare in the TamilNadu Coast. Röckel &amp; Korn (1990) described C. tuticorinensis as C. boschi (Clover 1972) . The shell shape of C. boschi and intergrading colour pattern of the holotype specimen of C. melvilli Sowerby III are similar, thus, C. boschi and C. melvilli were considered as conspecific. Röckel et al. (1995) considered C. boschi as invalid species and placed it with C. melvilli . C. tuticorinensis is similar to C. melvilli . The latter species differs in its wider sutures and absence of spiral grooves from its sutural ramps. Also, C. melvilli has a dark violet aperture, less angulate shoulder and narrow last whorl.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF89A529CFBAC277FF7AA381	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF89A528CFBAC5AFFB8BA4C4.text	03A287BEFF89A528CFBAC5AFFB8BA4C4.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus vexillum Gmelin 1791	<div><p>56. Conus vexillum Gmelin, 1791 (Figure 57)</p><p>Conus vexillum Gmelin, 1791: 3397, no. 68 (representation of lectotype, Rumphius 1705. pl. 31, fig. 5 (68 x 39 mm) (Kohn 1966); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus sumatrensis Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 655–656, no. 54 (representation of lectotype, n Chemnitz 1788: pl. 144a, figs. a, b (71 x 45 mm) (Walls 1979); "Isle de Sumatra ").</p><p>Cucullus canonicus Röding, 1798: 43, no. 535/54 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1773: pl. 57, fig. 629 (63 x 35 mm); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus princeps Holten, 1802: 34, no. 440 (lectotype same as that of C. sumatrensis Hwass (Kohn 1981); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus leopardus Dillwyn, 1817: 364, no. 20 (lectotype same as that of C. sumatrensis Hwass (Walls 1979); "East Indian Seas, Sumatra ").</p><p>Conus sulphuratus Kiener, 1845: pl. 66, fig. 3, pl. 78, fig. 4.</p><p>Conus robillardi Bernardi, 1858: 182–183, pl. 7, figs. 2, 3 (holotype, MNHN (27 x 14 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS156, 8 specimens, SL 40–108 mm; SW 22–52 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to large, solid to heavy. Body whorl conical to broadly conical, outline convex adapically, straight below. Shoulder angulate to rounded. Spire of low to moderate height, outline straight to slightly convex, weak spiral ribs on base. Aperture uniformly wide, interior white, outer lip thin sharp and straight.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl brown except for variably broad white spiral bands at centre and shoul- der, often interrupted and sometimes absent. Overlying, dense wavy dark-brown streaks, and closely spaced coarse to fine lines extend from base to shoulder. Spire white, flecked with brown. Base dark-brown. Periostracum olive-brown, thick and ridged.</p><p>Distribution. Conus vexillum has been reported from the Malabar coast (Bruguière 1792; Mawe 1823; Melvill &amp; Standen 1898), west coast of India. Kohn (1978) referred to museum specimens collected at Tuticorin (at ZSI and MGM) and an unlabelled specimen in the Krusadai Island Museum.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from Keelakarai and Tuticorin (Table 6) by trawling in 10– 40 m, mainly on sand bottoms.</p><p>Remarks. An uncommon species probably restricted to Gulf of Mannar.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF89A528CFBAC5AFFB8BA4C4	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF88A528CFBAC315FC46A3D9.text	03A287BEFF88A528CFBAC315FC46A3D9.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus vimineus Reeve 1849	<div><p>57. Conus vimineus Reeve, 1849 (Figure 58)</p><p>Conus vimineus Reeve, 1849: pl. 7, sp. 269 (type, BMNH (29 x 10.5 mm); " Cagayan, Island of Mindanao, Philippines ").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 157, 1 specimen, SL 36 mm; SW 12 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately small, light and fragile, elongate. Body whorl narrowly conical, outline convex adapically, straight below. Entire body whorl with deep, axially striate spiral grooves separating regularly spaced ribs near base and variably arranged ribs and narrow ribbons above; elevations of ribs smooth. Shoulder broadly rounded, not distinct from spire. Spire moderately high, sharply pointed, sides straight. Aperture uniformly narrow, outer lip very thin, strongly sloping below level of shoulder; straight.</p><p>Ground colour pale brown. Body whorl with spiral rows of rectangular light brown spots on ribs, fusing into axial streaks that cluster in three indistinct spiral bands below shoulder, above centre and near base. Spire pale brown. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Röckel et al. (1995) reported one specimen from Madras.</p><p>The specimen reported herein was collected from the trash discard of a fishing-boat at Cuddalore fishing harbour (Table 6). Depth of occurrence and nature of bottom is not known. We presume that C. vimineus most probably inhabits the sandy bottom of Cuddalore.</p><p>Remarks. Appears to be a rare species along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF88A528CFBAC315FC46A3D9	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF88A52BCFBAC607FDA5A439.text	03A287BEFF88A52BCFBAC607FDA5A439.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus violaceus Gmelin 1791	<div><p>58. Conus violaceus Gmelin, 1791 (Figure 59)</p><p>Conus violaceus Gmelin, 1791: 3391, no. 51 (representation of holotype, Martini 1777: pl. 2, figs. 18, 19 (50 x 17 mm) (Röckel et al. 1995); locality unknown).</p><p>Conus tendineus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 733–734, no. 127 (lectotype, MHNG (76 x 27 mm) (Walls 1979); "les mers d’ Afrique").</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 158, 1 specimen, SL 55 mm; SW 20 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized, moderately solid, glossy. Body whorl narrowly cylindrical; outline convex over adapical third and straight below to almost uniformly straight and parallel-sided. Shoulder indistinct from spire. Spire of moderate height; outline convex, sutures narrowly channeled. Spire tip rounded and sharp. Body whorl with widely separated narrow spiral ribs from base to shoulder; weaker at shoulder. Aperture narrow, wider anteriorly; outer lip thick, straight, sloping below shoulder.</p><p>Ground colour white. Body whorl with light brown axial streaks and with three dark-brown spiral bands above centre, within basal third and at shoulder. Spire light-brown with early whorls white. Base violet. Aperture white; outer colour visible along the inner lip margin.</p><p>Distribution. This species has not been previously reported from India.</p><p>The specimen described herein was collected from Pamban (Table 6) by trawling in 10–20 m, mainly on intertidal sandy-mud.</p><p>Remarks. This study reports the occurrence of C. violaceus for the first time from India. It is a very rare species along the TamilNadu Coast.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF88A52BCFBAC607FDA5A439	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF8BA52BCFBAC227FE8CA01F.text	03A287BEFF8BA52BCFBAC227FE8CA01F.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus virgo Linnaeus 1758	<div><p>59. Conus virgo Linnaeus, 1758 (Figure 60)</p><p>Conus virgo Linnaeus, 1758: 713, no. 253 (representation of lectotype, Rumphius 1705: pl. 31, fig. E (63 x 30 mm) (Kohn 1963); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 159, 48 specimens, SL 50–110 mm; SW 28–52 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell moderately large, heavy with a low gloss. Body whorl conical, outline slightly convex over the adapical quarter, straight below. Shoulder broad, angulate. Spire low to flat, outline slightly concave to slightly convex. Aperture moderately narrow, posteriorly slightly wider anteriorly, outer lip sharp, straight or nearly so. Body whorl with weak or obsolete spiral ribs near base. Widely spaced fine ribs and wrinkled threads between extend to centre or beyond.</p><p>Ground colour white to yellow, with occasionally darker orange collabral lines marking growth cessations. Base broadly stained deep purple, visible both dorsally and ventrally. Spire same colour as body whorl, usually paler. Aperture glossy white, with a large, dark purple blotch at base. Periostracum thick, dark brown and opaque.</p><p>Distribution. Early reports of C. virgo are by Melvill &amp; Standen (1898) and by Sundaram (1969) from Mandapam along the east coast. Based on specimens deposited in museums, Kohn (1978) reported that this species is known to occur from Pondicherry (at MNHN) to Tuticorin (at ZSI, MGM) on the east coast and also from Bombay (at ZMUC) on the west coast.</p><p>The specimens reported herein were collected from various stations (Table 6) by trawling in 5–20 m around the coral reef islands of the Gulf of Mannar. However, at Vedhalai the specimens were collected by diving in 5 m, on the sand and coral rubble .</p><p>Remarks. This species is confined to the Gulf of Mannar. Their prevalence at shallow depths around the coral islands indicates their preference for such habitat. They often occur with C. araneosus, C. leopardus and C. terebra .</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF8BA52BCFBAC227FE8CA01F	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
03A287BEFF8BA52DCFBAC6CAFE97A146.text	03A287BEFF8BA52DCFBAC6CAFE97A146.taxon	http://purl.org/dc/dcmitype/Text	http://rs.tdwg.org/ontology/voc/SPMInfoItems#GeneralDescription	text/html	en	Conus zeylanicus Gmelin 1791	<div><p>60. Conus zeylanicus Gmelin, 1791 (Figure 61)</p><p>Conus zeylanicus Gmelin, 1791: 3389, no. 41 (representation of lectotype, Martini 1777: pl. 2, fig. 20 (44 x 23 mm) (Kohn 1966); locality unknown.</p><p>Conus obesus Hwass in Bruguière, 1792: 623–624, no. 19 (lectotype, MHNG (65 x 45.5 mm) (Kohn 1968); "les mers des Indes orientales").</p><p>Cucullus meningeus Röding, 1798: 39, no. 491/17 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 142, fig. 1318 (42 x 23 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Cucullus theobroma Röding, 1798: 43, no. 549/60 (representation of lectotype, Chemnitz 1788: pl. 142, fig. 1318 (42 x 23 mm) (Kohn 1975); locality unknown).</p><p>Material examined: MBMCS 160, 120 specimens, SL 42–56 mm; SW 25–38 mm .</p><p>Description. Shell medium sized to moderately large, solid to moderately heavy. Body whorl conical or ventricosely conical, outline slightly convex above base and below shoulder and more straight in between. Body whorl with variably broad spiral ribs at base, smoother posteriorly with many low spiral and axial threads and growth marks. Shoulder wide, rounded, margins irregularly undulate. Spire of low to moderate height, sharply pointed, sides slightly convex. Aperture narrow posteriorly, much wider below; outer lip thick, straight or nearly so.</p><p>Ground colour white with strong pinkish tones, covered with a variable pattern of small brown dashes and spots, opaque white blotches, larger black triangles; combinations of these features result in patterns usually comprising two broad and indistinct spiral bands of dark brownish triangles and blotches; the bands usually above and below centre, sometimes a weak additional band below shoulder; the whole pattern is very inconsistent. Shoulder whitish with large dark-brown blotches. Spire whorls whitish with smaller brown blotches. Aperture white.</p><p>Distribution. Kohn (1978) first reported C. zeylanicus from Tuticorin and he also referred to unpublished records of two specimens trawled near Madras.</p><p>The specimens described herein were collected by trawling in sandy bottoms at 8–10 m at Periyakuppam and in 10–50 m at Cuddalore, mainly on sand and sandy-mud bottoms.</p><p>Remarks. Conus zeylanicus, though abundant, was found only at Cuddalore and Periyakuppam. Specimens of C. zeylanicus varied in the colour pattern of the body whorl (Figure 62R). The pinkish tones may be heavy or reduced. Apart from the typical two broad spiral bands of blackish triangles and blotches on the body whorl, specimens vary from inconstant spiral bands to complete absence.</p><p>Rarely, a worm, probably Aspidosiphon muelleri Diesing (Pers. comm. by Kohn) was found to inhabit empty shells of C. zeylanicus, coiled around the posterior columella (Figure 62S&amp;T).</p><p>Figures 62. A, B, C &amp; D. Specimens of C. achatinus showing variation of colour pattern, E. Specimens of C. amadis showing variation of colour pattern, F. C. amadis with a heavy infestation of Balanus amphitrite on the shell surface, G. The occurrence of Balanus reticulatus on the shell surface of C. amadis, H. C. araneosus with a heavy infestation of Balanus amaryllis on the shell surface, I. An odd specimen of Conus araneosus with a turreted or stepped spire, J. Sea anemone on C. figulinus, K. Sea anemones removed from the shell surface of C. loroisii, L. Sea anemone on C. monile, M. An unusual shell of C. geographus with very thin shell and sharp lip, N. Albino specimen of C. inscriptus without any banding pattern, O. Specimens of C. monile showing variation of the banding pattern in the last whorl, P. Dorsal and ventral view of C. striatus f. subfloridus, Q. Specimens of C. textile showing variation of colour pattern, R. Specimens of C. zeylanicus showing variation of colour pattern, S &amp; T. A worm probably Aspidosiphon muelleri Diesing coiled around the anterior columella of an empty shell of C. zeylanicus . Scale bars: 62A, B, C, D &amp; N: 1 cm; 62H, I, M, O, Q &amp; R: 2 cm.</p></div>	https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03A287BEFF8BA52DCFBAC6CAFE97A146	Public Domain	No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.		MagnoliaPress via Plazi	Franklin, J. Benjamin;Subramanian, K. A.;Fernando, S. Antony;Krishnan, K. S.	Franklin, J. Benjamin, Subramanian, K. A., Fernando, S. Antony, Krishnan, K. S. (2009): 2250. Zootaxa 2250: 1-63
