Umbilicate pebblesnail | |
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Drawing of apertural view of the shell and its operculum of Clappia umbilicata | |
Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda |
(unranked): | clade Caenogastropoda clade Hypsogastropoda |
Superfamily: | Rissooidea |
Family: | Lithoglyphidae |
Genus: | Clappia |
Species: | †C. umbilicata |
Binomial name | |
Clappia umbilicata (Walker, 1904)[2] |
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Synonyms[1][4] | |
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The umbilicate pebblesnail, scientific name Clappia umbilicata, is an extinct species of a small freshwater snails that had an operculum, aquatic gastropod mollusks in the family Lithoglyphidae.[5]
Contents |
This species was endemic to the Alabama, United States.[1] The type locality is Coosa River at Wetumpka, Alabama.[2]
Its distribution included: Coosa River at Duncan's Ripple, The Bar and Higgin's Ferry in Chilton County; and Butting Ram Shoals in Coosa County, Alabama.[3][6]
This species has been discovered and described under the name Somatogyrus umbilicatus by American malacologist Bryant Walker in 1904.[2] Walker's type description reads as follows:
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Somatogyrus umbilicatus n. sp. Pl. v, fig. 5. Shell small, globosely depressed, umbilicate, light greenish-yellow, smooth, except for the fine, rather unequal, lines of growth. Spire short, obtusely elevated. Whorls 3½ those of the spire convex and separated by a well-impressed suture; body whorl large, gibbously convex. Aperture sub-circular, rather longer than broad, obtusely angled above and slightly flattened along the basal margin. Columella concave, narrowly reflected; columellar callus, moderately heavy, rounded, reflected over but not concealing the round, deep umbilicus, thin and transparent on the parietal wall. Alt. 3, diam. 3 mm. Coosa river at Wetumpka, Ala. (type locality), also at Fort Williams Shoals above Farmer, Ala. This species is remarkable for its depressed, valvata-like form and round, deep umbilicus, which readily differentiates it from all other known species of the genus. It does not appear to be very abundant at AVetumpka, and only a single example was collected at Fort Williams Shoals. |
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The color of Clappia umbilicata was black.[3] It presumably mean the whole animal including snout, nape, mantle and foot.[5] The black color of the mantle has been verified by Thompson (1984).[5]
Clappia umbilicata has 56-59 rows of teeth on its radula.[5] Each row has 6-7 central basocones, 6-7 central octocones, 18-21 lateral teeth, ca. 50 inner marginal teeth and ca. 35 outer marginal teeth.[5]
Its natural habitat was rivers.[1] Clappia umbilicata required rapid flowing sections of river shoals.[5] It died out because of silting of its habitat after the dam was constructed[1] (Jordan Dam and Jordan Lake).
Based on examination of radula, Thompson (1984)[5] hypothesized, that Clappia umbilicata was grazing on fine particles of plants and it was specialized on more fine partiecles than the genus Somatogyrus.[5]
This article incorporates public domain text from reference[2][6]