Pseudofusulus varians

Pseudofusulus varians
Common and albinotic colour forms of Pseudofusulus varians
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
(unranked): clade Heterobranchia

clade Euthyneura
clade Panpulmonata
clade Eupulmonata
clade Stylommatophora
informal group Sigmurethra

Superfamily: Clausilioidea
Family: Clausiliidae
Subfamily: Clausiliinae
Tribe: Clausiliini[1]
Genus: Pseudofusulus
Nordsieck, 1977[2]
Species: P. varians
Binomial name
Pseudofusulus varians
(C. Pfeiffer, 1828)[3]
Synonyms

Clausilia varians Pfeiffer, 1828

Pseudofusulus varians is a species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Clausiliidae.

Genus Pseudofusulus is monotypic genus (contains one species only) with Pseudofusulus varians as its type species.

It is a relict species from Atlantic period of the Holocene, inhabiting exclusively nature beech and scree forests in Europe.[4]

Contents

Distribution

Its distribution is Eastern-Alpine and Western-Carpathian.[5] The type locality is High Alps in Styria, Austria.[3]

The key area of its range are Western Alps (from the south-western part of Alps to Croatia, and also to Dolomites in the southern Tyrol).[4]

Description

The shell is horny or greenish brown and finely ribbed.[7] The shell has 9-10 whorls.[7] The apertural margin is detached.[7] Columellaris is deep inside and forked, hardly visible in a perpendicular view.[7] Palatal wall is white and prominent.[7] There is no lunula.[7] Subcolumellaris is very close to basal furrow, visible in an oblique view.[7] Clausilium is not very concave.[7]

The width of the shell is 2.2-3 mm.[7] The height of the shell is 9-12 mm.[7]

Habitat

Pseudofusulus varians is very exacting on the quality of its environment and its populations are small and quite scattered in the whole of its range.[4]

It lives in virgin-like forests[5] and old-growth forest with fallen dead wood (coarse woody debris) in montane and submontane.[4] It is found in humid and shady habitats in woods, under ground litter and stones, in mountains.[7] In the Czech Republic it is strictly associated with trees, restricted to undisturbed and hardly accessible natural beech forests.[7] Pseudofusulus varians is strictly dendrophilous species, so the main threat is dead wood removing and clearcutting.[4]

As it is endangered in the whole Europe, it is very important to protect its modern sites.[4]

References

This article incorporates public domain text from the reference[7] and CC-BY-3.0 text from the reference[4]

  1. ^ "Clausiliini". Fauna Europaea, last update 27 January 2011, accessed 27 April 2011.
  2. ^ (German) Nordsieck H. (1977). "Zur Anatomie und Systematik der Clausilien, XVIII. Neue Taxa rezenter Clausilien". Archiv für Molluskenkunde 108(1/3): 73-107. page 96.
  3. ^ a b (German) Pfeiffer C. (1828). "Naturgeschichte deutscher Land- und Süsswasser-Mollusken". Dritte Abtheilung. pp. I-VI, 1-84 pp., Taf. I-VIII. Weimar. (Landes-Industrie-Comptoir). p. 40, Taf. 7, Fig. 24-25.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Lacina A. (2011). "Poznámky k ekologii, rozšíření a ochraně vřetence horského (Pseudofusulus varians) v České republice. [Notes to the ecology, distribution and protection of Pseudofusulus varians in the Czech Republic]". Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 10: 18-23. PDF.
  5. ^ a b (Czech) Lacina A. & Horsák M. (2009). "Jak se vede vřetenatci horskému – z červené knihy našich měkkýšů" ["Is the land Snail Pseudofusulus varinas Doing Well? From the Czech Republic's Red Book of Molluscs"]. Živa, Praha LVII(2): 73-74. English abstract.
  6. ^ (Czech) Ložek V. (1985). "Z červené knihy našich měkkýšů - je ohrožen vřetenec horský?". Živa 33: 221.
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o "Species summary for Pseudofusulus varians". AnimalBase, last modified 23 March 2011, accessed 27 April 2011.