释义 |
- Freshwater gastropods
- Land gastropods
- Freshwater bivalves
- See also
- References
- Further reading
- External links
The non-marine molluscs of Argentina are a part of the molluscan fauna of Argentina. There are hundreds of species of molluscs living in the wild in Argentina. There are a total of ??? species of gastropods, which breaks down to 101[1][1] species of freshwater gastropods, and ??? species of land gastropods in ?? genera, plus 65 species of bivalves living in the wild.[1] There are ?? non-indigenous species of gastropods (4[1] freshwater and ?? land species: ?? snails and ?? slugs) and ? species of bivalves in the wild in Argentina. This is a total of ? freshwater non-indigenous species of wild molluscs. Potamolithus is the largest genus (with highest species richness) of recent freshwater snails in Argentina.[2]- Summary table of number of species
| Argentina | freshwater gastropods | 101[2] | land gastropods | ??? | gastropods altogether | ??? | bivalves | 65[2] | molluscs altogether | ??? | non-indigenous gastropods in the wild | 4 freshwater and ?? land | non-indigenous synantrop gastropods | ? | non-indigenous bivalves in the wild | ? | non-indigenous synantrop bivalves | ? | non-indigenous molluscs altogether | 4 | |
Freshwater gastropods There are 10 families of freshwater gastropods in Argentina.[1] There are 40 species of freshwater gastropods endemic to Argentina.[1] There are about 45 endangered freshwater gastropods in Argentina.[1] Ampullariidae - 12 species, one endemic[2]- Asolene platae (Maton, 1809)[2]
- Asolene puelchella (Anton, 1839)[2]
- Asolene spixii (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Felipponea neritiniformis (Dall, 1919)[2]
- Felipponea elongata (Dall, 1921)[2]
- Felipponea iheringi (Pilsbry, 1933)[2]
- Marisa planogyra Pilsbry, 1933[2]
- Pomacea canaliculata (Lamarck, 1822)[2]
- Pomacea insularum (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2][3]
- Pomacea scalaris (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Pomella americanista (Ihering, 1919)[2]
- Pomella megastoma (G. B. Sowerby I, 1825)[2]
Thiaridae - 4 species, 3 endemic[2] but extinct in the wild- Aylacostoma chloroticum Hylton-Scot, 1954[2] - extinct in the wild[4]
- Aylacostoma guaraniticum (Hylton-Scot, 1951)[2] - extinct in the wild[5]
- Aylacostoma stigmaticum Hylton-Scot, 1954[2] - extinct in the wild[6]
- Melanoides tuberculata (O. F. Müller, 1774)[2]
Cochliopidae - 16 species, 10 endemic[2]- Heleobia australis (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Heleobia castellanosae (Gaillard, 1974)[2]
- Heleobia conexa (Gaillard, 1974)[2]
- Heleobia guaranitica (Doering, 1884)[2]
- Heleobia hatcheri (Pilsbry, 1911)[2]
- Heleobia isabelleana (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Heleobia kuesteri (Ströbel, 1874)[2]
- Heleobia montana (Doering, 1884)[2]
- Heleobia occidentalis (Doering, 1884)[2]
- Heleobia parchappii (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2] - but Heleobia occidentalis and Heleobia vianai may be synonyms of Heleobia parchappii[7]
- Heleobia peiranoi (Weyrauch, 1963)[2]
- Heleobia piscium (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Heleobia rionegrina (Gaillard, 1974)[2]
- Heleobia sublineata (Pilsbry, 1911)[2]
- Heleobia tucumana (Gaillard, 1974)[2]
- Heleobia vianai (Parodiz, 1960)[2]
Lithoglyphidae - 22 species[2][1]- Potamolithus agapetus Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Potamolithus bushii (Frauenfeld, 1865)[2]
- Potamolithus callosus Pilsbry, 1925[2]
- Potamolithus catharinae Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Potamolithus concordianus Parodiz, 1966[2]
- Potamolithus conicus (Brot, 1867)[2]
- Potamolithus dinochilus Pilsbry, 1896[2]
- Potamolithus doeringi Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Potamolithus hidalgoi Pilsbry, 1896[2]
- Potamolithus iheringi Pilsbry, 1896[2]
- Potamolithus lapidum (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Potamolithus microthauma Pilsbry, 1896[2]
- Potamolithus orbignyi Pilsbry, 1896[2]
- Potamolithus paranensis Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Potamolithus peristomatus (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Potamolithus petitianus (d'Orbigny, 1840)[2]
- Potamolithus philipianus Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Potamolithus quadratus Pilsbry & Ihering, 1911[2]
- Potamolithus rushii Pilsbry, 1896[2]
- Potamolithus simplex Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Potamolithus tricostatus (Brot, 1867)[2]
- Potamolithus valchetensis Miquel, 1998[2]
Glacidorbidae - 1 species[2]- Gondwanorbis magallanicus (Meier-Brook & Smith, 1976)[2]
Chilinidae - 17 species,[2][78] 12 endemic[2][78]- Chilina aurantia Marshall, 1924[2]
- Chilina dombeiana (Bruguière, 1789)[2]
- Chilina fluminea (Maton, 1809)[2]
- Chilina fulgurata Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Chilina gallardoi Castellanos & Gaillard, 1981[2]
- Chilina gibbosa G. B. Sowerby I, 1841[2]
- Chilina guaraniana Castellanos & Miquel, 1980[2]
- Chilina iguazuensis Gregoric & Rumi, 2008[8]
- Chilina megastoma Hylton Scott, 1958[2]
- Chilina mendozana Ströbel, 1874[2]
- Chilina neuquenensis Marshall, 1933[2]
- Chilina parchappii (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Chilina patagonica Sowerby II, 1874[2]
- Chilina perrieri Mabille, 1833[2]
- Chilina portillensis Hidalgo, 1880[2]
- Chilina rushii Pilsbry, 1911[2]
- Chilina strebeli Pilsbry, 1911[2]
Lymnaeidae - 5 species, 2 endemic[2]- Pseudosuccinea columella (Say, 1817)[2]
- Lymnaea diaphana King, 1830[2]
- Lymnaea pictonica Rochebrune & Mabille, 1885[2]
- Lymnaea plicata Hylton Scott, 1953[2]
- Lymnaea viatrix (d´Orbigny, 1835)[2]
Planorbidae - 20 species[2]- Antillorbis nordestensis (Lucena, 1954)[2]
- Acrorbis petricola Odhner, 1937[2]
- Biomphalaria intermedia (Paraense & Deslandes, 1962)[2]
- Biomphalaria occidentalis Paraense, 1981[2]
- Biomphalaria oligoza Paraense, 1974[2]
- Biomphalaria orbignyi Paraense, 1975[2]
- Biomphalaria peregrina (d´Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Biomphalaria straminea (Dunker, 1848)[2]
- Biomphalaria tenagophila (d´Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Drepanotrema anatinum (d´Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Drepanotrema cimex (Moricand, 1839)[2]
- Drepanotrema depressissimun (Moricand, 1839)[2]
- Drepanotrema heloicum (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Drepanotrema kermatoides (d'Orbigny, 1835)[2]
- Drepanotrema lucidum (Pfeiffer, 1839)[2]
- Anisancylus obliquus (Broderip & G. B. Sowerby I, 1832)[2]
- Gundlachia ticaga (Marcus & Marcus, 1962)[2]
- Hebetancylus moricandi (d´Orbigny, 1837)[2]
- Laevapex sp.[2]
- Uncancylus concentricus (d´Orbigny, 1835)[2]
Physidae - 5 species, 2? endemic[2]- Physa aspii Holmerg, 1909[2]
- Physa loosi Holmerg, 1909[2]
- "Physella cubensis" (Pfeiffer, 1839)[2]
- "Physella venustula" (Gould, 1848)[2]
- "Stenophysa marmorata" (Guilding, 1828)[2]
Land gastropods CyclophoridaeCharopidae- Lilloiconcha tucumana[131]
- Radiodiscus iheringi
- Trochogyra leptotera Rochebrune & Mabille, 1882[9]
HelicodiscidaeDiplommatinidaeSuccineidae- Omalonyx unguis (d’Orbigny, 1837)[10]
Scolodontidae (Systrophiidae is a synonym for Scolodontidae) - Wayampia trochilioneides[11]
- Scolodonta Doering, 1875[12]
Odontostomidae- Plagiodontes rocae Doering, 1881[13][14]
- Plagiodontes weyrauchi Pizá & Cazzaniga, 2009[15]
Milacidae- Milax gagates (Draparnaud, 1801) - non-indigenous[16]
Epiphragmophoridae- Epiphragmophora Doering, 1874 - (see also Cuezzo 2006)
{{Expand section|date=December 2009}}Freshwater bivalvesHyriidae - 1? endemic[2]Etheriidae - 1? endemic[2]Sphaeriidae - 25 species, 10 endemic[2]Corbiculidae- Corbicula fluminea - invasive species[2]
Mytilidae- Limnoperna fortunei - invasive species[2]
{{expand section|date=December 2009}}See also- List of marine molluscs of Argentina
Lists of molluscs of surrounding countries: - List of non-marine molluscs of Chile
- List of non-marine molluscs of Bolivia
- List of non-marine molluscs of Paraguay
- List of non-marine molluscs of Brazil
- List of non-marine molluscs of Uruguay
References1. ^1 2 3 4 5 Rumi A., Gregoric D. E. G., Núñez V., César I. I., Roche M. A., Tassara M. P., Martín S. M. & Armengol M. F. L. (2006). "Freshwater Gastropoda from Argentina: Species Richness, Distribution Patterns, and an Evaluation of Endangered Species". Malacologia 49(1): 189-208. {{doi|10.4002/1543-8120-49.1.189}} 2. ^1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 Rumi A., Gregoric D. E. G., Núñez V. & Darrigran G. A. (2008). "Malacología Latinoamericana. Moluscos de agua dulce de Argentina". Revista de Biología Tropical 56(1): 77-111. HTM. 3. ^Rawlings T. A., Hayes K. A., Cowie R. H. & Collins T. M. (2007). "The identity, distribution, and impacts on non-native apple snails in the continental United States". BMC Evolutionary Biology 7: 97 {{doi|10.1186/1471-2148-7-97}}. 4. ^Mansur M. C. D. (2000). Aylacostoma chloroticum. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 6 August 2007. 5. ^Mansur M. C. D. (2000). Aylacostoma guaraniticum. In: IUCN 2010. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2010.1. Downloaded on 24 Mars 2010. 6. ^Mansur M. C. D. (2000). Aylacostoma stigmaticum. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 6 August 2007. 7. ^Bouchet, P. (2016). Heleobia parchappii (d'Orbigny, 1835). In: MolluscaBase (2017). Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=886632 on 2017-11-20 8. ^1 2 Gregoric D. E. G. & Rumi A. (January 2008) "Chilina iguazuensis (Gastropoda: Chilinidae), New Species From Iguazú National Park, Argentina". Malacologia 50(1): 321-330. {{doi|10.4002/0076-2997-50.1-2.321}} 9. ^Mansur, M.C.D. 1996. Trochogyra leptotera. In: IUCN 2009. IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Version 2009.2. . Downloaded on 20 November 2009. 10. ^{{Cite journal|last=Guzmán|first=Leila B.|last2=Serniotti|first2=Enzo N.|last3=Vogler|first3=Roberto E.|last4=Beltramino|first4=Ariel A.|last5=Rumi|first5=Alejandra|last6=Peso|first6=Juana G.|date=2018-09-07|title=First record of the semi-slug Omalonyx unguis (d’Orbigny, 1837) (Gastropoda, Succineidae) in the Misiones Province, Argentina|url=https://checklist.pensoft.net/articles.php?id=27199|journal=Check List|language=en|volume=14|issue=4|pages=705–712|doi=10.15560/14.5.705|issn=1809-127X}} 11. ^1 2 Oroño E. S., Cuezzo M. G. & Romero F. (March 2007) "Land snail diversity in subtropical rainforest mountains (Yungas) of Tucumán, northwestern Argentina". American Malacological Bulletin 22(1): 17-26. {{doi|10.4003/0740-2783-22.1.17}} 12. ^Sutcharit C., Naggs F., Wade C. M., Fontanilla I. & Panha S. (2010). "The new family Diapheridae, a new species of Diaphera Albers from Thailand, and the position of the Diapheridae within a molecular phylogeny of the Streptaxoidea (Pulmonata: Stylommatophora)". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 160: 1-16. {{doi|10.1111/j.1096-3642.2009.00598.x}}. 13. ^ {{sp icon}} Roca J. A. (ed.), Döring A., Berg C., Holmberg E. L. (1881) Informe oficial de la Co (Patagonia) realizada en los meses de Abril, Mayo y Junio de 1879, bajo. Buenos Aires, [https://archive.org/details/informeoficialde00arge scan] (chapter Molluscos: [https://archive.org/stream/informeoficialde00arge#page/60/mode/2up page 61]-75. 14. ^Pizá J., Ghezzi N. S. & Cazzaniga N. J. (2006). "A rare endemic land-snail from Argentina: Plagiodontes rocae Doering 1881 (Gastropoda: Orthalicidae: Odontostominae)". Archiv für Molluskenkunde: International Journal of Malacology 135(1): 91-99. {{doi|10.1127/arch.moll/0003-9284/135/091-099}}. 15. ^Pizá J. & Cazzaniga N. J. (2009). "A new species of Plagiodontes from Argentina, and new data on the anatomy of four other species in the genus (Gastropoda: Orthalicidae, Odontostominae)". Journal of Natural History 43(23-24): 1437-1471. {{doi|10.1080/00222930902903244}}. 16. ^Clemente N. L., Faberi A. J., Salvio C. & Lopez A. N. (2010). "Biology and individual growth of Milax gagates (Draparnaud, 1801) (Pulmonata: Stylommatophora)". Invertebrate Reproduction and Development 54(3): 163-168. {{doi|10.1080/07924259.2010.9652328}}.
Further reading- Cuezzo M. G. (2006). "Systematic Revision and Cladistic Analysis of Epiphragmophora Doering from Argentina and Southern Bolivia (Gastropoda: Stylommatophora: Xanthonychidae)". Malacologia 49(1): 121-188. {{doi|10.4002/1543-8120-49.1.121}}
- Fernández D. (1973). "Catálogo de la malacofauna terrestre argentina". Comisión de Investigaciones Científicas de la Provincia de Buenos Aires 4: 1–197.
- Fernández D. & Castellanos Z. (1973). "Clave genérica de la malacofauna terrestre Argentina". Revista del Museo de La Plata XI, Zoología 107: 265–285.
- Gregoric D. E. G., Núñez V., Rumi A. & Roche M. A. (2006). "Freshwater gastropods from del Plata basin, Argentina. Checklist and new locality records". Comunicaciones de la Sociedad Malacológica del Uruguay 9(89): 51-60. PDF.
- Holmberg E. L. (1909). "Mollusca Geophila Argentina Nova". Apuntes Historia Natural Buenos Aires 1: 19-12.
- Holmberg E. L. (1909). "Mollusca Argentina Varia". Apuntes Historia Natural Buenos Aires 1: 691-92.
- Holmberg E. L. (1912). "Moluscos Argentinos en parte nuevos, coleccionados por Franco Pastore". Physis 1: 20-22.
- {{sp icon}} Miquel S. E. & Aguirre M. L. (2011). "Taxonomía de los gastrópodos terrestres del Cuartenario de Argentina". [Taxonomy of terrestrial gastropods from the Quaternary of Argentina.] Revista Española de Paleontología 26(2): 101-133. PDF.
- Parodiz J. J. (1957). "Catalogue of Land Mollusca of Argentina". The Nautilus 70(4): [https://archive.org/stream/nautilus70amer#page/126/mode/2up 127]-135.
- Parodiz J. J. (1957). "Catalogue of Land Mollusca of Argentina". The Nautilus 71(1): [https://archive.org/stream/nautilus71amer#page/22/mode/2up 22]-30.
External links{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2011}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Molluscs Argentina}} 5 : Molluscs of Argentina|Lists of biota of Argentina|Lists of molluscs by country|Freshwater molluscs|Molluscs of South America |