Corded purg

The corded purg, scientific name Pyrgulopsis nevadensis, is an extinct species of freshwater snail with a gill and an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Hydrobiidae.

Corded purg
Drawing of lateral view of the shell of Pyrgulopsis nevadensis.
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
(unranked):
Superfamily:
Family:
Subfamily:
Nymphophilinae
Genus:
Species:
P. nevadensis
Binomial name
Pyrgulopsis nevadensis
(Stearns, 1883)[2]
Synonyms

Pyrgulopsis nevadensis is the type species of the genus Pyrgulopsis.[3]

Shell description

The shell is small, somewhat elongated, variable, turreted and imperforate. The shell has 4½-5½ whorls, that are strongly unicarinate on periphery, otherwise smooth. The epidermis is shining, light straw in color or whitish. The suture is white. The suture is deeply and regularly impressed, made conspicuous by the approximating carina.[3]

There existed also smooth variation. (plate II, figure 6-8.)

The aperture is very oblique, roundly ovate, with an angle on outer edge corresponding to the excavated carina, posteriorly sharply angled, well rounded before. The peritreme is continuous, almost rimate, closely appressed to parietal wall.[3]

The operculum is light corneous, spiral and closely fitting the aperture.[3]

Drawing of apertural view of the shell of Pyrgulopsis nevadensis.
Drawing of operculum of Pyrgulopsis nevadensis.
Drawing of apertural view of the shell of Pyrgulopsis nevadensis.

Anatomy

Jaw is thin and membranaceous.

Detailed description of radula was provided by Charles Emerson Beecher in 1886 (page 11-12).

Drawing of radula of Pyrgulopsis nevadensis.

Distribution

It was endemic to the United States. This species had a limited distribution, occurring only, so far as present information goes, in North-western Nevada, in Walker Lake and Pyramid Lake. Living forms have been collected only in the last-named locality.[3]

gollark: It wouldn't be hot enough to *melt* if it stopped spinning like that.
gollark: If the Earth stopped moving, its trajectory would go directly toward the Sun. This would cause it to melt.
gollark: Except the REPEALED PENUMBRAE/NX-51 site.
gollark: All locations are locations for religious discussion.
gollark: Never heard of it. I'm just talking about when Contingency REPEALED PENUMBRAE was finally activated.

References

This article incorporates public domain text from reference.[3]

  1. Mollusc Specialist Group 2000. Pyrgulopsis nevadensis. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Archived June 27, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Downloaded on 7 August 2007.
  2. Stearns R. E. C. 1883. Proc. Phila. Acad. Nat. Sci.
  3. Call R. E. & Pilsbry H. A. 1886. On Pyrgulopsis, a new genus of rissoid mollusk, with description of two new forms. Proceeding Davenport Academy of Natural Sciences, volume V., page 9-14. Plate II., figures 1-10.
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