Galba meridensis
This taxon may be invalid (unaccepted).(Jan 2019) |
Galba meridensis | |
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Apertural view of a shell of Lymnaea meridensis | |
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Species: | L. meridensis
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Binomial name | |
Lymnaea meridensis Bargues, Artigas & Mas-Coma, 2011[1]
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Lymnaea meridensis is a species of air-breathing freshwater snail, an aquatic pulmonate gastropod mollusc in the family Lymnaeidae, the pond snails.
This species appears to be endemic to very high altitudes.[1]
This species belong to the Galba/Fossaria group,[2] therefore this species should be named Galba meridensis. cf.[1][2]
Distribution
According to the 2011 knowledge of the distribution of this species, and in contrast to the widespread species Galba cousini, Lymnaea meridensis appears to be a geographically restricted species. This seems to suggest that Lymnaea meridensis evolved in a somewhat isolated fashion, in permanent ponds and small ditches in more northern, very high altitude areas (3,550-4,040 m) of the Andean mountains, like those in Merida State, Venezuela.[1]
The type locality of Lymnaea meridensis is a permanent pond in Mucubaji (Kettle Mucubají), Merida State, Venezuela, located at an altitude of 3,550 m (8°47'51.8" N, 70°49'32.4" W).[1]
Description
The shell is light brown, thin-walled, with a relatively short spire.[1] The apex is obtuse.[1] The shell has fine growth lines, and has only 3 whorls.[1] The body whorl dominates the shell, is inflated and separated by a deep, well-marked suture.[1] The aperture is large, oblique, oval and wide at the base.[1] The shell tends to be one and a half times as long as it is wide, and its aperture tends to be two thirds as long as the shell or more than twice as long as the spire.[1]
The width of the shell is 3.7-6.0 mm.[1] The height of the shell is 6.6-9.3 mm.[1] The width of the aperture is 2.5-3.9 mm.[1] The height of the aperture is 4.8-6.0 mm.[1]
Excretory system: The renal tube extends straightly from the pericardial region toward the mantle collar, diagonally across the roof of the pallial cavity.[1] In its distal part, behind the osphradium, it shows two distinct flexures, coming back upon itself and, after a short course, bending sharply cephalad and rightward forming a ureter which tapers to a subterminal meatus behind the pneumostome.[1]
Reproductive system: The ovotestis appears composed by pressed acini around a collecting canal which continues into an ovispermiduct presenting a very short smooth-walled proximal segment followed by a bosselated swelling seminal vesicle and finally a relatively short distal segment which ends in the carrefour.[1] The albumen gland covers the carrefour and the origin of a bosselated, transverse tubular oviduct which follows a somewhat convolute course continuing into a striated nidamental gland.[1] The nidamental gland narrows into a smooth-walled uterus, which bends and continues into a short bulbous vagina showing a sphincter-like thickening.[1] The spherical spermatheca gives rise to a uniformly thin spermathecal duct which extends diagonally between the nidamental gland and the prostate until joining the vagina.[1]
The distal portion of the spermiduct and the proximal portion of the prostate run on the ventral surface of the nidamental gland.[1] The spermiduct, of granular outer surface, emerges from the carrefour, runs distalward and finally narrows to merge into a similarly granular prostate.[1] The prostate increases in width to its distal end, shows ventrally a lengthwise fissure, formed by the folding of its left margin, and finally two rounded protuberances, from whose convergence the vas deferens arises.[1] The vas deferens appears as a long, more or less uniformly thin duct which merges into a penis which is included within the penial sheath.[1] The penis sheath is regularly cylindrical, with a somewhat thicker proximal part.[1] The penis sheath is a little longer than the prepuce (ratio range of 0.93-1.38; mean 1.18 ± 0.18).[1] The prepuce is thicker, around twice as wide as the penis sheath at the point of insertion of the penial sheath and gradually narrowing to terminate in the male genital pore.[1]
Ecology
Lymnaea meridensis is probably susceptible to Fasciola hepatica infection.[1]
See also
Two species that have similar shell morphology:
References
This article incorporates CC-BY-2.0 text from the reference[1]
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Bargues M. D., Artigas P., Khoubbane M. & Mas-Coma S. (2011). "DNA sequence characterisation and phylogeography of Lymnaea cousini and related species, vectors of fascioliasis in northern Andean countries, with description of L. meridensis n. sp. (Gastropoda: Lymnaeidae)". Parasites & Vectors 4: 132. doi:10.1186/1756-3305-4-132.
- ^ a b Bargues M. D., Artigas P., Khoubbane M., Flores R., Glöer P., et al. (2011). "Lymnaea schirazensis, an Overlooked Snail Distorting Fascioliasis Data: Genotype, Phenotype, Ecology, Worldwide Spread, Susceptibility, Applicability". PLoS ONE 6(9): e24567. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0024567.