Whelk

Whelk

Taxobox
name = PAGENAME



image_width = 250px
image_caption = A lightning whelk shell found on a Gulf of Mexico beach in Louisiana.
regnum = Animalia
phylum = Mollusca
classis = Gastropoda
subclassis = Orthogastropoda
superordo = Caenogastropoda
ordo = Sorbeoconcha
subordo = Hypsogastropoda
infraordo = Neogastropoda
subdivision_ranks = Families
subdivision = See text
A whelk is one of several species of large sea snails, marine gastropod mollusks found in temperate waters.

In North America, the common name whelk refers to several species of large, usually edible "Busycon" snails, marine gastropod mollusks in the family Melongenidae.

For information about the common European and northern Atlantic edible whelk, please see "Buccinum undatum".

For information on various other marine snails which are sometimes known as whelks, please see articles on the taxonomic family to which they belong, see below.

Other sea snails called whelks

In English, "whelk" refers to various kinds of large (often edible) sea snails, but it is important to note that even though the same or similar common names may be used for all of these sea snails, the various different species of snail are often not at all closely related to one another. Some of these gastropods are so distantly related that they are not even in the same superorder as others.

In the British Isles and the Netherlands, where the word "whelk" seems to have originated, the word means "Buccinum undatum" and several related species in the family Buccinidae.

In some islands in the Caribbean, such as Saint Kitts and Nevis, the name whelks or "wilks" is used for a large edible top shell, "Cittarium pica", also known as the magpie, or West Indian top shell, which is in the family Trochidae.

In the USA, a problematic introduced species is known as "Veined rapa whelk" or "Asian rapa whelk" ("Rapana venosa"). This species is in the family Muricidae, the murexes.

In Australia and New Zealand, species of the genus "Cabestana" in the family Ranellidae are called predatory whelks.

hell description for "Busycon" whelks

Like other mollusks, whelks have a mantle, a thin layer of tissue located between the body and the shell that creates the shell. Whelks build their hard shells from the calcium carbonate they extract from seawater. The shells can grow up to 16 inches (40 cm) long.

"Busycon" whelk shells are generally cream, light grey or tan, and in one species the shell has brown and white streaks. The shells have a long siphonal canal, and most species coil dextrally (right-handed, or in a clockwise direction).

The lightning whelk, "Busycon perversum", native to the waters of the southeastern United States and the Gulf of Mexico, is unusual among gastropods in that it normally produces a sinistral (left-handed) shell. The shell shape of individual specimens varies widely in both coloration and sculpture.

Life habits of "Busycon" whelks

"Busycon" whelks are found in temperate waters. They are scavengers and carnivores, equipped with an extensible proboscis that is tipped with a file-like radula. The radula is used to bore holes through the shells of barnacles, clams, crabs and lobsters. They also have a large, muscular foot with which they hold their victims. Small sharks, gulls, crabs, and other whelks are known to feed upon whelks.

The knobbed whelk, "Busycon carica", is the second-largest species, ranging up to 12 in. (40.6 cm). They have tubercles (or spines) along the shoulder. Knobbed whelks eat clams. They open the clam with their hard shellstrong muscular foot and insert their long proboscis. The knobbed whelk is a common predator of the intertidal mudflats and as far offshore as 26 fathoms (48 m). The channeled whelk, "Busycotypus canaliculatus", is slightly smaller than the knobbed whelk and has a smooth shell with a deep square channel which is continuous on all the whorls, just below the suture of the shell.

"Busycon" whelk egg cases

Strings of "Busycon" whelk egg capsules fairly often wash up, and can dry out on the beach, becoming brittle. These objects are sometimes referred to as "mermaid's necklaces", because they resemble a large necklace strung with medallion-shaped egg pouches. Each pouch of the "necklace" contains a large number of baby whelks, similar in appearance to adults except that the baby shell, or protoconch, has far fewer whorls and less sculpture than the adult.

"Busycon" whelks as food

Another name for whelk (as a food source) in the United States is "scungilli". The name is an Italian-American adaptation of the Neapolitan word "sconciglio".

References

* [http://www.arches.uga.edu/~amylyne/GSC/whelk.html The Georgia Shell Club webpage entry for whelk]

External links

* [http://www.healthaliciousness.com/nutritionfacts/nutrition-comparison.php?o=15177&t=15178&h=&s=100&e=100&r= Nutrition Facts for Whelk]


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  • Whelk — (hw[e^]lk), n. [OE. welk, wilk, AS. weoloc, weloc, wiloc. Cf. {Whilk}, and {Wilk}.] (Zo[ o]l.) Any one numerous species of large marine gastropods belonging to {Buccinum} and allied genera; especially, {Buccinum undatum}, common on the coasts… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Whelk — Whelk, n. [OE. whelke, dim. of whele. See {Wheal} a pustule.] [1913 Webster] 1. A papule; a pustule; acne. His whelks white. Chaucer. [1913 Webster] 2. A stripe or mark; a ridge; a wale. [1913 Webster] {Chin whelk} (Med.), sycosis. {Rosy whelk}… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • whelk — [welk] n [: Old English; Origin: hweoloc] a small sea animal that has a shell and can be eaten …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • whelk — [ welk, hwelk ] noun count a small SHELLFISH that lives along the coast of the North Atlantic Ocean. It is sometimes eaten as food …   Usage of the words and phrases in modern English

  • whelk — large marine snail, O.E. weoloc, wioloc, from P.Gmc. *weluka (Cf. M.Du. willoc, Du. wulk), perhaps from PIE root *wel to turn, revolve (see VULVA (Cf. vulva); Cf. also VOLUTE (Cf. volute)). The spelling with wh dates from 15c …   Etymology dictionary

  • whelk — ► NOUN ▪ a predatory marine mollusc with a heavy pointed spiral shell, some kinds of which are edible. ORIGIN Old English …   English terms dictionary

  • whelk — [hwelk, welk] n. [ME welke < OE wioluc < IE base * wel , to turn (with reference to the spiral shell) > WALK] any of various families (esp. Buccinidae) of large marine snails which are often carnivorous and edible …   English World dictionary

  • whelk — whelk1 /hwelk, welk/, n. any of several large, spiral shelled, marine gastropods of the family Buccinidae, esp. Buccinum undatum, that is used for food in Europe. [bef. 900; late ME, aspirated var. of ME welk, OE weoloc] whelk2 /hwelk, welk/, n.… …   Universalium

  • whelk — UK [welk] / US / US [hwelk] noun [countable] Word forms whelk : singular whelk plural whelks a small shellfish that lives along the coast of the North Atlantic Ocean. It is sometimes eaten as food …   English dictionary

  • whelk — I. noun Etymology: Middle English welke, from Old English weoloc; akin to Middle Dutch willoc whelk and perhaps to Latin volvere to turn more at voluble Date: before 12th century any of numerous large marine snails (as of the genus Buccinum);… …   New Collegiate Dictionary

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