The habitat of Velutina velutina include bathyal, infralittoral and circalittoral of the Gulf and estuary.[3] Minimum recorded depth is 0 m.[4] Maximum recorded depth is 183 m.[4]
Sexes are separate but are seldom conspicuously different externally.[3]Velutina velutina is a simultaneous hermaphrodite yet self-fertilization is prevented due to various morphological, physiological, or behavioral mechanisms.[3] They shed their eggs.[3]
References
This article incorporates CC-BY-SA-3.0 text from the reference.[3]
^Müller (1776). Zoologiae Danicae Prodromus, seu Animalium Daniae et Norvegiae Indigenarum, characteres, nomina, et synonyma imprimis popularium. Havniae [Copenhagen]: Typis Hallageriis xxxii + 281 p.
^Fabricius O. (1780). Fauna Groenlandica systematice sistens animalis Groenlandiae occidentalis hactenus indagata. Hafniae et Lipsiae, J.G. Rothe pp. XVI + 452 + 1 pl. Google books
^Manfred Diehl (1956): Die Raubschnecke Velutina velutina als Feind und Bruteinmieter der Ascidie Styela coriacea. Kieler Meeresforschungen. 12 : 180–185.
External links
Robert Hugh Morris, Donald Putnam Abbott, Eugene Clinton Haderlie. Intertidal Invertebrates of California, p. 273, 13.66. Velutina sp., V. velutina (Müller, 1776), Smooth Velutina. Stanford University Press, 1st ed., Stanford (CA, USA) 1980. (Google Books)