Biology:Sibirenauta sibirica

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Short description: Species of gastropod

Sibirenauta sibirica
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Animalia
Phylum:
Class:
(unranked):
clade Heterobranchia
clade Euthyneura
clade Panpulmonata
clade Hygrophila
Superfamily:
Family:
Subfamily:
Aplexinae
Tribe:
Aplexini
Genus:
Species:
S. sibirica
Binomial name
Sibirenauta sibirica
(Westerlund, 1877)[1]
Synonyms[2]
  • Physa (? Isidora) sibirica Westerlund, 1877
  • Physa sibirica Westerlund, 1877
  • Sibirenauta sibirica (Westerlund, 1877)

Sibirenauta sibirica is a species of small air-breathing freshwater snail, an aquatic pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Physidae, a family which are sometimes known as the bladder snails.

Taxonomy

Swedish malacologist Carl Agardh Westerlund discovered and described this species under the name Physa sibirica in 1877.[1][2] Starobogatov et al. moved this species to the genus Sibirenauta in 1989.[2] Vinarski and colleagues designated the lectotype for Sibirenauta sibirica in 2013 and the lectotype is stored in the Swedish Museum of Natural History in Stockholm.[2] The generic name Sibirenauta is feminine (according to original description), the correct species name should be Sibirenauta sibirica instead of S. sibiricus as it was cited by several authors.[3]

Distribution

Distribution of Sibirenauta sibirica include northern Asia and Alaska.[2] It occurs in Arctic Asia, Subarctic Asia and in the south of Eastern Siberia.[2]

This species occurs in:

  • Wrangel Island, Russia.[4] No mollusc species were found on Wrangel Island up to 2015.[4]

The type locality is Yenisei River, Sopotchnaya Korga, 71°40’N in Taymyr Peninsula.[1][2]

Description

The external and internal morphology is described and depicted for example by Vinarski et al. 2015.[3][4]

The height of the shell is up to 13 mm, usually 10-12 [3] The shell has 6 whorls.[1]

Dimensions of the lectotype are as follows: The width of the shell is 4.7 mm.[2] The height of the shell is 8.8 mm.[2] The shell has 4.75 whorls.[2]

Ecology

For example, there was pH 8.2 and 84 ppm NaCl on the lake locality in the Wrangel Island.[4]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 (in Swedish) Westerlund C. A. (1877). "Sibiriens Land- och Sötvatten-Mollusker. I." Kongliga Svenska Vetenskaps-Akademiens Handlingar 14(2): 55-56. 101 pp.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 Vinarski M. V., Nekhaev I. O., Glöer P. & von Proschwitz T. (2013). "Type materials of freshwater gastropod species described by C.A. Westerlund and accepted in current malacological taxonomy: a taxonomic and nomenclatorial study". Ruthenica 23: 79–108.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Nekhaev I. O. (2015). "Surviving at the edge of land: finding of the limnetic snail Sibirenauta sibirica (Gastropoda: Physidae) on the coast of the Laptev Sea (Eastern Siberia)". Bulletin of the Russian Far East Malacological Society 19: 25-30.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 Vinarski M. V., Palatov D. M. & Novichkova A. (2015). "The first freshwater molluscs from Wrangel Island, Arctic Russia". Polar Research 34: 23889. doi:10.3402/polar.v34.23889

External links

Taylor D. W. (2003). "Introduction to Physidae (Gastropoda: Hygrophila). Biology, classification, morphology". Revista de Biología Tropical 51(Suppl. 1): 1-299. (1-195, 197-263, 265-287). page 71. Wikidata ☰ Q22286312 entry