Chytra kirki | |
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Color drawing of apertural view of the shell of Chytra kirki shows its dirty whitish appearance | |
Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda |
(unranked): | clade Caenogastropoda clade Sorbeoconcha |
Superfamily: | Cerithioidea |
Family: | Paludomidae |
Subfamily: | Hauttecoeuriinae |
Tribe: | Tiphobiini[2] |
Genus: | Chytra Moore, 1898[3] |
Species: | C. kirki |
Binomial name | |
Chytra kirki (E. A. Smith, 1880)[4] |
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Synonyms | |
Limnotrochus Kirkii E. A. Smith, 1880 |
Chytra kirki is a species of tropical freshwater snail with an operculum, aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Paludomidae.[1]
Chytra kirki is the only species in the genus Chytra.[5]
The specific name kirki is in honor of explorer John Kirk (1832-1922), who has donated various other specimen of snails (not this species) to the Natural History Museum.[6]
Contents |
This species is found in Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, and Zambia.[1] The type locality is Lake Tanganyika.[4]
The shell is solid, trochiform and dirty whitish in color.[6] The spire is acutely conical.[6] The shell has 6 or 7 feebly concave whorls.[6] They are bearing arcuate and flexuous lines of growth and six or seven granulous lirae, whereof that immediately above the suture is the largest.[6] The body whorl is acutely angular at the periphery, encircled by two subequal granular ridges.[6] The base is concave near the circumference, then slightly convex, concentrically granosely ridged.[6] The ridges nearest the umbilicus are coarser than the others, and also arcuately radiately striated.[6] The shell has deep and narrow umbilicus.[6]
The aperture is irregularly subcircular and whitish.[6] The outer lip (viewed laterally) is obliquely incurved.[6] Basal and columellar margins are forming one strongly arcuate line joined above to the extremity of the labrum by a thickish callosity.[6]
The width of the shell is 19 mm.[5] The height of the shell is 15 mm.[5]
Its natural habitat is freshwater lakes.[1] It is widespread[5] species in the Lake Tanganyika, but its distribution is patchy and with low numbers of snails.[1] It lives on the mud with much organic material in depths 10-20 meters.[5][1] There is possibility that it can live in depths up to 80 m.[5][1]
This article incorporates public domain text from the reference[6]