To install click the Add extension button. That's it.

The source code for the WIKI 2 extension is being checked by specialists of the Mozilla Foundation, Google, and Apple. You could also do it yourself at any point in time.

4,5
Kelly Slayton
Congratulations on this excellent venture… what a great idea!
Alexander Grigorievskiy
I use WIKI 2 every day and almost forgot how the original Wikipedia looks like.
Live Statistics
English Articles
Improved in 24 Hours
Added in 24 Hours
Languages
Recent
Show all languages
What we do. Every page goes through several hundred of perfecting techniques; in live mode. Quite the same Wikipedia. Just better.
.
Leo
Newton
Brights
Milds

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Albinaria
Apertural view of a shell of Albinaria latelamellaris
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Heterobranchia
Order: Stylommatophora
Family: Clausiliidae
Tribe: Medorini
Genus: Albinaria
Vest, 1867[1]
Diversity[2]
116 species

Albinaria is a genus of air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Clausiliidae, the door snails.[3]

Ecology and Life Cycle

The snails live on limestone rocks, where they feed on algae and lichen. They are active only during the wet season, that is, in Mediterranean lowlands, from November through April. Eggs are laid shortly after the beginning of the wet season. The development from a juvenile to a fully grown shell takes two to three wet seasons. During the intermittent dry seasons, the snails, young and adults alike, aestivate ("the warm weather equivalent of hibernation"[4]) on the rocks or in crevices inside the rocks. For aestivation, aggregates are often formed, sometimes reaching sizes of many hundreds of individuals. During the last dry season prior to sexual maturation, the subadult snail (the shell of which is already fully developed, albeit thinner than that of an adult) increases the size of its genital organs. Copulation then takes place during the first weeks of autumn rains. Population densities can sometimes be very high, in spite of heavy predation by beetle larvae of the genus Drilus. These insects attack the snails during their aestivation, by perforating the shell and eating the snail inside.[5]

Distribution

Distribution of the genus Albinaria includes:

  • southern Albania
  • Greece
  • Cyprus
  • western and southern Turkey
  • Lebanon

Species

Species in this genus include 111 species:[6]

  • Albinaria adrianae Gittenberger, 1979
  • Albinaria adriani (Gittenberger, 1987)
  • Albinaria alajana (Boettger, 1896)
  • Albinaria amalthea (Westerlund, 1878)
  • Albinaria anatolica (Roth, 1839)
  • Albinaria arcadica (Boettger, 1878)
  • Albinaria argynnis (Westerlund, 1898)
  • Albinaria ariadne Schilthuizen & Gittenberger, 1991
  • Albinaria arthuriana (Boettger, 1878)
  • Albinaria avia (Charpentier, 1852)
  • Albinaria basalifera Neubert, 1992
  • Albinaria bigibbosula (Westerlund, 1878)
  • Albinaria brevicollis (Pfeiffer, 1850)
  • Albinaria broemmei (Boettger, 1892)
  • Albinaria butoti (Nordsieck, 1984)
  • Albinaria caerulea (Deshayes, 1835)
  • Albinaria campylauchen (Boettger, 1883)
  • Albinaria candida (Pfeiffer, 1850)
  • Albinaria cerigottana (Boettger, 1894)
  • Albinaria christae Wiese, 1989
  • Albinaria compressa (Pfeiffer, 1850)
  • Albinaria confusa (Boettger, 1878)
  • Albinaria contaminata (Rossmässler, 1835)
  • Albinaria corrugata (Bruguière, 1792)
  • Albinaria cretensis (Rossmässler, 1836)
  • Albinaria cristatella (Küster, 1861)
  • Albinaria cytherae (Boettger, 1894)
  • Albinaria discolor (Pfeiffer, 1846)
  • Albinaria eburnea (Pfeiffer, 1854)
  • Albinaria edmundi (Gittenberger, 1987)
  • Albinaria evelynae Gittenberger, 1998
  • Albinaria forbesiana (Pfeiffer, 1846)
  • Albinaria freytagi (Boettger, 1889)
  • Albinaria fuchskaeufeli Nordsieck, 1977
  • Albinaria gerolimena Nordsieck, 1974
  • Albinaria grayana (Pfeiffer, 1846)
  • Albinaria greeni Tomlin, 1935
  • Albinaria grisea (Deshayes, 1835)
  • Albinaria haessleini Fauer, 1978
  • Albinaria hians (Boettger, 1878)
  • Albinaria hippolyti (Boettger, 1878)
  • Albinaria hohorsti Nordsieck, 1984
  • Albinaria idaea (Pfeiffer, 1850)
  • Albinaria idyllica (Gittenberger, 1987)
  • Albinaria ietswaarti Gittenberger & Menkhorst, 1992
  • Albinaria inauris (Boettger, 1896)
  • Albinaria ithomensis Nordsieck, 1984
  • Albinaria jaeckeli Wiese, 1989
  • Albinaria janicollis Schultes & Wiese, 1991
  • Albinaria janisadana Loosjes, 1955
  • Albinaria jonica (Pfeiffer, 1866)
  • Albinaria kemerensis Nordsieck, 1993
  • Albinaria klemmi Paget, 1971
  • Albinaria krueperi (Pfeiffer, 1866)
  • Albinaria latelamellaris Neubert, Örstan & Welter-Schultes, 2000
  • Albinaria lerosiensis (Pfeiffer, 1841)
  • Albinaria li Welter-Schultes, 1999
  • Albinaria linnei Gittenberger, 2008
  • Albinaria litoraria Neubert, 1998
  • Albinaria lycica Nordsieck, 1993
  • Albinaria maculosa (Deshayes, 1835)
  • Albinaria maltzani (Böttger, 1883)
  • Albinaria manselli (Boettger, 1883)
  • Albinaria mavromoustakisi Brandt, 1961
  • Albinaria menelaus (Martens, 1873)
  • Albinaria mixta Nordsieck, 1984
  • Albinaria monocristata Neubert, 1992
  • Albinaria moreletiana (Boettger, 1878)
  • Albinaria munda (Rossmässler, 1836)
  • Albinaria myrensis Nordsieck, 1993
  • Albinaria nadimi Tohme & Tohme, 1988
  • Albinaria nivea (Pfeiffer, 1854)
  • Albinaria olivieri (Roth, 1839)
  • Albinaria papillifera Nordsieck, 1993
  • Albinaria pellucida Nordsieck, 1993
  • Albinaria pelocarinata Gittenberger, 1994
  • Albinaria percristata Nordsieck, 1993
  • Albinaria petrosa (Pfeiffer, 1849)
  • Albinaria praeclara (Pfeiffer, 1853)
  • Albinaria profuga (Charpentier, 1852)
  • Albinaria proteus (Boettger, 1889)
  • Albinaria puella (Pfeiffer, 1850)
  • Albinaria rebeli Wagner, 1924
  • Albinaria rechingeri Paget, 1971
  • Albinaria retusa (Olivier, 1801)
  • Albinaria rollei (Boettger, 1896)
  • Albinaria saxatilis (Pfeiffer, 1846)
  • Albinaria schuetti Nordsieck, 1984
  • Albinaria scopulosa (Charpentier, 1852)
  • Albinaria senilis (Rossmässler, 1836)
  • Albinaria solicola Neubert, 1998
  • Albinaria sphakiota (Maltzan, 1887)
  • Albinaria spratti (Pfeiffer, 1846)
  • Albinaria staudingeri (Boettger, 1890)
  • Albinaria sturanyi Wagner, 1924
  • Albinaria subaii (Nordsieck, 1984)
  • Albinaria sublamellosa (Boettger, 1883)
  • Albinaria supercarinata Gittenberger & Menkhorst, 1992
  • Albinaria tenuicostata (Pfeiffer, 1864)
  • Albinaria terebra (Pfeiffer, 1853)
  • Albinaria teres (Olivier, 1801)
  • Albinaria thiesseae (Boettger, 1880)
  • Albinaria torticollis (Olivier, 1801)
  • Albinaria turrita (Pfeiffer, 1850)
  • Albinaria violacea Schilthuizen & Gittenberger, 1990
  • Albinaria virgo (Mousson, 1854)
  • Albinaria voithii (Rossmässler, 1836)
  • Albinaria wettsteini Fuchs & Käufel, 1936
  • Albinaria wiesei Gittenberger, 1988
  • Albinaria xanthostoma (Böttger, 1883)
  • Albinaria zilchi Fauer, 1993

References

  1. ^ (in German) Vest, W. von 1867. Ueber den Schliessapparat der Clausilien. Verhandlungen und Mittheilungen des Siebenbürgischen Vereins für Naturwissenschaften in Hermannstadt 18 (1, 7, 8): 5-18, 161-174, 188-196.
  2. ^ "Species in genus Albinaria n=116". AnimalBase, accessed 10 March 2011.
  3. ^ Schilthuizen, M., 1994. Differentiation and Hybridisation in a Polytypic Snail. PhD Thesis, Leiden University.
  4. ^ Gould, S.J., 1985. The Flamingo's Smile; Reflections in Natural History. Norton, New York
  5. ^ Baalbergen, E., R. Helwerda, R. Schelfhorst, R.F.Castillo Cajas, C.H.M. van Moorsel, R. Kundrata, F.W. Welter-Schultes, S. Giokas & M. Schilthuizen, 2014. Predator-prey interactions between shell-boring beetle larvae and rock-dwelling land snails. PLoS ONE, 9(6): e100366
  6. ^ Species in genus Albinaria  . AnimalBase, accessed 21 September 2009.

Further reading

  • De Weerd, D. R. U. T.; Gittenberger, E. (2005). "Towards a monophyletic genus Albinaria (Gastropoda, Pulmonata): The first molecular study into the phylogenetic position of eastern Albinaria species". Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. 143 (4): 531. doi:10.1111/j.1096-3642.2005.00154.x..
  • Kemperman Th. C. M. (1992). "Genitalia of Albinaria of the Ionian islands Kephallinia and Ithaka". In: Kemperman Th. C. M. Systematics and evolutionary history of the Albinaria species from the Ionian islands of Kephallinia and Ithaka (Gastropoda Pulmonata: Clausiliidae): 41–80. Leiden, thesis Leiden University.
  • Schilthuizen M. & Gittenberger E. (1996). "Allozyme variation in some Cretan Albinaria (Gastropoda): paraphyletic species as natural phenomena". In: Taylor J. D. (ed.) Origin and evolutionary radiation of the Mollusca: 301–311. Oxford University Press, Oxford.
  • Yamazaki, N.; Ueshima, R.; Terrett, J. A.; Yokobori, S.; Kaifu, M.; Segawa, R.; Kobayashi, T.; Numachi, K.; Ueda, T.; Nishikawa, K.; Watanabe, K.; Thomas, R. H. (1997). "Evolution of pulmonate gastropod mitochondrial genomes: Comparisons of gene organizations of Euhadra, Cepaea and Albinaria and implications of unusual tRNA secondary structures". Genetics. 145 (3): 749–758. doi:10.1093/genetics/145.3.749. PMC 1207859. PMID 9055084.
  • Welter-Schultes, F. W. (2001). "Spatial variations inAlbinaria terebraland snail morphology in Crete (Pulmonata: Clausiliidae): Constraints for older and younger colonizations?". Paleobiology. 27 (2): 348–368. doi:10.1666/0094-8373(2001)027<0348:SVIATL>2.0.CO;2. ISSN 0094-8373. S2CID 85832001..

External links

This page was last edited on 5 October 2023, at 22:34
Basis of this page is in Wikipedia. Text is available under the CC BY-SA 3.0 Unported License. Non-text media are available under their specified licenses. Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc. WIKI 2 is an independent company and has no affiliation with Wikimedia Foundation.