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If
you are like me, you find it disappointing to read about a shell
trip to a wonderful sounding marine area, only to find it is 90%
about the country, and the other 10% is about all the money cowries
or tulip shells that were found. I want to use my 90% to tell
you about the shells I found -- those that would appeal to me,
and hopefully to you.
In
June, 1996, I went on a collecting trip to the Solomons. Our group
included Wayne Harland, Homer Rhode, Karlynn Morgan and myself.
We arrived at Honiara, Guadalcanal, the capital of the Solomons,
on June 9th. We boarded the Wyuna, with Brian and Mary
Claire Bailey, and we began collecting that same day. Snorkeling
near the mouth of the Lungga River in very poor visibility, on
dark sand, we found Conus monachus at 10' and deeper
under rocks, and in the open, C. figulinus, Thais
buccinea on a silty log, and Oliva vidua. That night,
using SCUBA at 50-65' depth, we collected Terebra commaculata
at the end of a sand trail, and Murex tenuirostrum, Cypraea
onyx melanesiae and Oliva rufula, all in the open.
A second dive that night off the Honiara Airport, starting at
about 100' and working up to 15' on a silty slope, yielded Conus
hopwoodi, C. betulinus, Strombus marginatus septimus, Cymatium
gutturnium, Trigonostoma obliquata, Glycymeris reevei, Phalium
areola, P. bisulcatum, pretty Natica undulata, N. alapapilionis
and N. vitellus. Oddly enough, whenever we found Conus
betulinus, it had another species on its back, Trigonostoma
obliquata, for instance. The Phalium areola was
crabbed. We also found Murex salomonensis and M.
tenuirostrum, but I won't mention them again, because we
found them at many sites at night.
The
next day was spent traveling; we anchored for the night and dove
at Vulalua Island. The depth was 35' on a silty bottom. We collected
Harpa amouretta out on the sand, crawling with its wide,
fleshy foot, Strombus labiosus, Bursa tuberosissima and
B. rana. Conus pohlianus (which the latest cone
book calls C. consors form pohlianus) and an
unusually marked C. leopardus with markings much larger
and fewer than normal were both at the base of a small reef on
sand at about 30'. The following morning, some of us walked on
exposed flat reef along the shoreline. Thais tuberosa
was abundant and I found my first Turbo sparverius and
a large, 81mm Asaphis violascens.
We
left Guadalcanal and crossed over to the Florida Islands group.
Killing time 'til dark, we snorkeled at Nuggu Island, where we
found Conus episcopatus under a rock, and several common
species such as Cypraea arabicula. Our night dive, at
Mandoleana Island, yielded Fusinus colus at 90' on sand,
Chicoreus paini and C. axicornis both crabbed
on the sand and rubble slope, and a Harpa harpa at 55'
on sand. A Cypraea cribraria was at 10' on a coral head,
and Conus ammiralis was at 90' while C. planorbis
appeared at 20' on the side of a log in algae.
We
dove Mbungana Island the night of June 12, on a sloping reef with
sand and rubble and coral heads, to find Turridrupa cerithium
on reef sand and one of the prettiest of all turrids, Turris
spectabilis at 47' on a small rock. Also found Latirus
gibbulus in sand and rubble, the lovely Nassarius glans
at 27' on reef sand and a 99mm crabbed Cymatium pileare.
On the 13th, we snorkeled in a small lagoon at Aviavi Island.
I found a 107mm Mitra mitra nearly buried. I spotted
a fleck of orange and fanned it up. Common, but excellent, specimens
of Tectus conus (66mm) and T. triserialis (42mm)
were at 6-8' on coral heads, and my first Spondylus varius
was attached to dead coral.
That
night we dove the unique Mboli Passage, on Nggela Island. About
the width of a freshwater stream and sporting a current requiring
a drift dive holding rope attached to the boat, this passage provides
several habitats on a single dive. You can encounter sand with
delicate soft corals, silty mud, coral reef areas, or gravel bottom,
all coming by you very quickly in poor visibility. Among the soft
corals were Cypraea bregeriana, C. onyx melanesiae, Margovolva
bimaculata, and Volva volva. On the sand was Murex
pecten, Conus acutangulus, Architectonica perspectivum and
Gyrineum pusillum. On the mud was Placomen calophyllum.
On
the 14th we snorkeled off Siota, the small village where the Mboli
Passage empties into the sea. There were Conus stramineus,
C. leopardus, C. striatellus, black C. marmoreus
and C. magus, as well as a crabbed Voluta rutila
and a lovely white crested tellin, Tellina capsoides,
all on sand. Wayne found a pair of Ovula ovum which he
photographed and returned to their coral head. That night we dove
and snorkeled at Siota. I collected Turris babylonia
and another turrid I had hoped to get, Clavus flammulatus,
at 8' on sand and rubble, a pair of nice Pterygia fenestrata
at 8' in sand trails, Harpa major and Pyramidella
acus. Mitra eremitarum was on a coral head feeding
on a worm inside the coral. Its proboscis was extended so far
I had to break it to pull the mollusk off. I also took a live
86mm Cymbiola rutila with SCUBA at 45' on sand and rubble
there.
The
next day. the 15th, we snorkeled Anuha Island and found common
species. That night we dove there and I found Polinices maura,
the only black Polinices I can think of, with a white
animal. A 90mm Mitra papalis was at 30' on reef top rubble,
as well as Conus moreleti and my largest Conus geographus
(104mm), the last at 78'. Next day we snorkeled at Buena Vista
Island by day and dove at night. There was Cypraea nucleus
on coral, Latirus lancea, and a crabbed Homalocantha
anatomica -- they're so camouflaged I'd never have found
it if it was live, and Homer found one of the few shells that
he really wanted, a fine Conus ammiralis, on sand.
The
next morning we departed the Florida Islands and returned to Guadalcanal.
Then the collecting got good! That night, diving at Kakombona
on a sand slope, Wayne and I each found our first Conus gloriamaris,
and each was a gem, at 63' on a sandy slope! There was also Conus
generalis, Strombus minimus, S. plicatus pulchellus, Casmaria
erinaceus, several colorful Phalium glaucum, and
under a rusted slab of sheet metal, a beautiful Chama pacifica.
On
the 18th, we went back near the Lungga River mouth and put on
tanks to dive the silted poor-visibility slope in search of logs
to push our hands under while hoping to avoid the dangerous fins
of the Butterfly Cod. This hardest dive, physically, was worth
it. Karlynn and Homer each found a Conus gloriamaris
under the same log, and the specimens were larger than the two
that Wayne and I had found.
That
night, and the next, we dove Mamara Point and had our best finds
of the trip. Between Wayne and me, we found five Conus crocatus,
in among dead coral fingers, three of which were giants over 60mm.
The other three divers found Conus bullatus, while I
collected Conus viola, C. circumcisus, C. legatus, C. litoglyphus,
C. muriculatus sugillatus. C. imperialis, C. omaria and other
cones, all in the same coral habitat as the C. crocatus.
I also found there a large 21mm Psilaxis (syn: Philippia)
radiata, Coralliophila admirantium, Vexillum zelotypum
and more. Between these night dives, we day-snorkeled off downtown
Honiara where the best shell was found by Karlynn, a nice, large
Conus varius, sitting on a coral head right by the downtown
seawall.
We
were to depart from Fiji on the morning of June 21st, so the 20th
was spent packing and transferring our gear from the boat to a
hotel. Karlynn and I made one last night dive at the nearby Point
Cruz on a reef down to 75'. There was Lyrocardium lyratum,
fresh dead on reef sand, a 6.5 inch black hammer oyster, Malleus
malleus, my first Cymatium lotorium, Conus emaciatus,
C. vexillum, and we each found Conus circumcisus.
This
was the second trip to the Solomons for Wayne and me, both of
them with Brian Bailey aboard the Wyuna. We found many
species on this trip that we did not find on the first, and bigger
and better specimens of some of the species we found on the first
trip. Brian is THE expert, and if (I say IF) his boat and compressor
are in working order, any shelling trip with him as a guide is
sure to be a success.
This
article was extracted from official COA Conch-Net Web Page
hosted by the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia.
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