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Cay-cay
Tearing up a coral-head such as seen in the left center of the picture stirs up a lot of silt and at times reduces visibility
to only a few inches. Collecting from such areas is usually for a SCUBA equipped diver.
To insure finding the shells in such a coral-head I follow a simple technique. First the area surrounding the coral-head is
checked for shells such as miters and Terebra. The smaller coral pieces are turned over and checked for shells. Most Murex
pele and both Cypraea cernica that I have collected were attached to the under side of small, isolated pieces of coral. After
checking for shells these are thrown clear of the area surrounding the larger coral head which I systematically start tearing
to pieces.
The parade of cowry-authors down through the years is an impressive one: Gaskoin, Gray, Jousseaume, Hidalgo, Menke, Brazier,
Hedley, Cox, Iredale, Cotton, and perhaps the greatest workers of them all, the Schilders, who have devoted their lives to
the research of every possible facet that could be considered as pertinent to the study of Cypraea.
I'd like to single out just two or three of the more important of the systematic works in this family that have played a
major role in the various revisions that have taken place. First of these is the work published in 1884 by Jousseaume in the
Bulletin of Zoology in France. Jousseaume established, in this paper, many of the generic groups still in use today --
defining their limits and grouping species roughly into these genera.
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Shells
Jewellery
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