Fulgur carica = Busycon carica (knobbed whelk) Author George Brown Goode (1851–1896)
Busycon carica syn. Fulgur carica
English: Periwinkle, Tulgur varica
Subject: Tulgur, Catharanthus
Tag: Mollusks
Date 1884
Source/Photographer George Brown Goode (1884) Fisheries and Fishery Industries of the United States: Section I, Natural History of Useful Aquatic Animals, Plates, Washington, DC: Government Printing Office
Source: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3AFMIB_51172_Periwinkle%2C_Tulgur_varica.jpeg
The knobbed whelk (Busycon carica) is a species of very large predatory sea snail, or in the US, a whelk, a marine gastropod mollusk in the family Busyconidae, the busycon whelks. It is found in shallow waters of the Atlantic Ocean off the east coast of North America from Massachusetts to northern Florida. The knobbed whelk is the second largest species of busycon whelk, ranging in size up to 30.5 cm. The shell of most knobbed whelks is dextral, meaning that it is right-handed. The surface is sculpted with fine striations and there is a ring of knob-like projections protruding from the widest part of the coil. The color is ivory or pale gray, and the large aperture (the inside of the opening) is orange. The canal inside is wide and the entrance can be closed by a horny oval operculum.
Order: Neogastropoda
Family: Busyconidae
Genus: Busycon
Species: Busycon carica (Gmelin, 1791)