Neothauma tanganyicense | |
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Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda |
(unranked): | clade Caenogastropoda informal group Architaenioglossa |
Superfamily: | Viviparoidea |
Family: | Viviparidae |
Genus: | Neothauma E. A. Smith, 1880[2] |
Species: | N. tanganyicense |
Binomial name | |
Neothauma tanganyicense E. A. Smith, 1880[2] |
Neothauma tanganyicense is a species of freshwater snail with a gill and an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusc in the family Viviparidae.
This is the only species in the genus Neothauma.[3][4]
Contents |
It is only found in Lake Tanganyika, where it is the largest gastropod, and occurs in all four of the bordering countries — Burundi, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, and Zambia — although fossil shells have been discovered at Lake Edward and in the Lake Albert basin.[1]
The type locality is the East shore of Lake Tanganyika, at Ujiji.[4]
The width of the shell is 46 mm.[4] The height of the shell is 60 mm.[4]
It lives in depth up to 65 m.[4]
The shells of dead Neothauma tanganyicense often form carpets over large areas, and are used by a number of other animals, such as cichlid fish,[5] and freshwater crabs of the genus Platythelphusa.[6] Juvenile snails live in the sediment to avoid predators.[4]