Euhadra
Euhadra is a genus of air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Bradybaenidae. (This snail genus was previously placed in the family Eulotidae).
A few of the species in this genus are unusual in that specimens in those species always have left-handed "sinistral" coiling in their shells, as shown in the specimen on the right. The rest of the species in the genus are right-handed or "dextral" in the shell coiling, as is usually the case in the great majority of gastropods.
Distribution
These snails are endemic to Japan.
Species
There are 22 species in the genus. 17 species have a dextral shell and 5 species are sinistral.[1]
Dextral species in the genus Euhadra include:
- Euhadra amaliae (Kobelt, 1875)
- Euhadra awaensis
- Euhadra brandtii
- Euhadra callizona
- Euhadra congenita
- Euhadra dixoni (Pilsbry, 1900)
- Euhadra eoa
- Euhadra herklotsi (Martens, 1861)
- Euhadra idzumonis
- Euhadra kunoensis Kuroda in Masuda & Habe, 1989
- Euhadra latispira
- Euhadra latispira yagurai Kuroda & Habe, 1949 [1]
- Euhadra nachicola
- Euhadra nesiotica (Pilsbry,1902)
- Euhadra peliomphala
- Euhadra sadoensis
- Euhadra sandai
- Euhadra senckenbergiana
- Euhadra senckenbergiana aomoriensis (Gulick & Pilsbry, 1900)
- Euhadra senckenbergiana ibukicola
- Euhadra senckenbergiana notoensis
- Euhadra senckenbergiana minoensis
- Euhadra senckenbergiana senckenbergiana
Sinistral species
Sinistral species in the genus Euhadra include:
References
Further reading
- Ueshima R. & Asami T. (16 October 2003). "Evolution: Single-gene speciation by left–right reversal". Nature 425: 679. doi:10.1038/425679a
- (Japanese) Kawana M. (2007). かたつむりの世界〈マイマイ属〉 The world of land snails (Euhadra) in Japan. Nagoya, Kinmirai-sha. 332 pp. ISBN 9784906431250 (with English introduction)
- Yamazaki N., Ueshima R., Terrett J. A., Yokobori S., Kaifu M., Segawa R., Kobayashi T., Numachi K., Ueda T., Nishikawa K., Watanabe K. & Thomas R. H. (1997). "Evolution of pulmonate gastropod mitochondrial genomes: comparisons of complete gene organizations of Euhadra, Cepaea and Albinaria and implications of unusual tRNA secondary structures". Genetics 145: 749-758.