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Limacina: Encyclopedia BETA


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Limacina

{{Taxobox
color = pinkname = Limacinaimage = LimacinaHelicinaNOAA.jpgimage_width = 240pximage_caption = Limacina helicinaregnum = Animaliasubregnum = Metazoaphylum = Molluscaclassis = Gastropodasubclassis = Orthogastropodasuperordo = Heterobranchiaordo = Opisthobranchiasubordo = Thecosomatainfraordo = Euthecosomatasuperfamilia = Limacinoideafamilia = Limacinidaegenus = Limacinasubdivision_ranks = Speciessubdivision =
Limacina bulimoides
Limacina helicina
Limacina helicoides
Limacina lesueurii
Limacina retroversa
Limacina trochiformis

The sea butterflies from the family Limacinidae (Blainville, 1823) have evolved from fossils from the Middle Miocene. The family Limacinidae contains the genus Limacina and a new genus, only known from fossils, Currylimacina.

The shells of these sea butterflies are well developed, sinistrally coiled, turret-like and unpigmented. Shell sizes and thicknesses vary within Limacina, but they are still large enough to fit the snail. There is also an operculum. In arctic and temperate waters, the diameter of the shell does not superseed 15 mm. In warmer waters, the diameter varies between 1 to 3 mm.

There are two large winglike parapodia. derived from foot tissue. These sea butterflies are continually flapping these wings to prevent sinking, because the shell gives them some negative buoyancy. During daytime, they tend to move to deeper waters, but no lower than 100 m.

They have a peculiar way of feeding. One used to think of them as passive feeders, but actually they are active hunters, feeding mostly on plankton but also bacteria, small crustaceans, gastropod larvae, dinoflagellates and diatoms. They entangle their planktonic food through a mucous web that can be up to 5 cm wide, many times larger than themselves. This web is eaten as soon as there is enough food entangled and then a new one is soon deployed. This net also provides them additional buoyancy. If disturbed, they dump the net and flap away.There is a posterior footlobe with cilia, and a pair of lateral footlobes. They transport food, collected by the mucous web, to the mouth.

When they migrate to the surface, they may do so in unbelievably huge numbers. These aggregations usually attract their predators, the sea angels of the genus Clione (family Clionidae, suborder Gymnosomata). They are also on the menu of baleen whales.

Genus Limacina Bosc, 1817
Limacina bulimoides ((d'Orbigny, 1836) -- Bulimoid Pteropod
**Distribution : Red Sea, Pacific
**Length : 1.2 mm
* Limacina helicina (Phipps, 1774) -- Helicid Pteropod
**Distribution : North America, Western Atlantic, East Pacific, Antarctic, Arctic Ocean
**Subspecies :
**Limacina helicina acuta Van Der Spoel, 1967
**Limacina helicina helicina Phipps, 1774
**Limacina helicina pacifica (Dall, 1871
* Limacina helicoides Jeffreys, 1877
* Limacina inflata (d'Orbigny, 1836) -- Planorbid Pteropod
**Distribution : circumglobal, Red Sea, Pacific
**Length : 1 mm
**Description : the shell is flatly twisted, resembling the shell of the cephalopod Nautilus.
Limacina lesueurii ((d'Orbigny, 1836)
**Distribution : North America, Western Atlantic
Limacina retroversa (Fleming, 1823) -- Retrovert Pteropod
**Distribution : North America, Western Atlantic, Arctic Ocean.
Limacina trochiformis ((d'Orbigny, 1836) -- Trochiform Pteropod
**Distribution : North America, Western Atlantic, Red Sea, Pacific
**Length : 1 mm



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