Pomatiopsis
Pomatiopsis | |
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Scientific classification | |
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Genus: | Pomatiopsis |
Type species | |
Cyclostoma lapidaria Say, 1817 | |
Synonyms | |
Chilocyclus Gill, 1863 (invalid: junior homonym of Chilocyclus Bronn, 1851) |
Pomatiopsis is a
Pomatiopsis is the type genus of the family Pomatiopsidae.[1]
Distribution
The distribution of the genus Pomatiopsis includes the USA: West Coast of the United States, Midwestern United States and Eastern United States.[3]
Description
In 1862, the American malacologist George Washington Tryon first defined this genus.[2] Tryon's diagnosis reads as follows:[2]
Shell elongate, the spire (of about six whorls) much exceeding the length of the aperture.
Species
There are four[3] species within the genus Pomatiopsis:
- Pomatiopsis binneyi Tryon, 1863[3]
- Pomatiopsis californica Pilsbry, 1899[3]
- Pomatiopsis chacei Pilsbry, 1937
- Pomatiopsis cincinnatiensis (Lea, 1840)[3]
- Pomatiopsis hinkleyiPilsbry, 1896
- Pomatiopsis lapidaria (Say, 1817) - type species[3]
Ecology
Species in the genus Pomatiopsis are amphibious, living in humid habitats, on marshy ground and in periodically flooded soil (Pomatiopsis californica and Pomatiopsis lapidaria), in trickling water (Pomatiopsis binneyi) and on mud of streams (Pomatiopsis cincinnatiensis).[3]
References
This article incorporates public domain text from the reference[2]