Bathyomphalus contortus facts for kids
Quick facts for kids Bathyomphalus contortus |
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Conservation status | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Phylum: | |
Class: | |
(unranked): | |
Superfamily: |
Planorboidea
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Family: |
Planorbidae
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Subfamily: |
Planorbinae
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Tribe: |
Planorbini
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Genus: |
Bathyomphalus
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Species: |
B. contortus
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Binomial name | |
Bathyomphalus contortus (Linnaeus, 1758)
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Bathyomphalus contortus is a species of small air-breathing freshwater snail, an aquatic pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Planorbidae, the ram's horn snails and their allies.
Distribution
The distribution of this species is Palearctic:Eurasian Wide-temperate.
It occurs in countries and islands including:
- Great Britain
- Czech Republic - least concern (LC)
- Germany
- Netherlands
- Poland
- Slovakia
Description
The 1-2 × 3-6 mm shell has up to 7-8 densely coiled and rounded whorls with deep suture. The whorls are higher than wide, the lower side is almost flat, the upper side with a large umbilicus which is more than 1/3 of the shell diameter. The aperture is narrow. Shell colour is reddish horny brown, often with black or brown encrustations, finely striated. The animal is blackish dark red, tentacles very long, eyes small and black.
Habitat
This small snail lives in freshwater habitats especially small, impoverished water-bodies and drains and marshy or peaty pools. It is also found in floodplain marshes. It seldom occurs in larger water-bodies. Bathyomphalus contortus is tolerant of acidic conditions as is Radix balthica. In Ireland it is often the only species present in pools or drains in and around raised bogs.