Perrottetia (gastropod)

Perrottetia is a genus of air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Streptaxidae.[5]

Perrottetia
Perrottetia aquilonaria
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Phylum:
Class:
(unranked):
Superfamily:
Family:
Subfamily:
Streptaxinae
Genus:
Perrottetia

Kobelt, 1905[1]
Diversity[2][3]
32 species
Synonyms[4]

Odontartemon (Perrottetia) Kobelt, 1905

Distribution

Most species of Perrottetia live in India, but there are additional species of this genus known from Sri Lanka, Myanmar, Thailand, Laos,[2] North to South Vietnam[3] and Hainan Island and Taiwan in Southern China.[4] The distribution of the genus Perrottetia includes also Mascarenes.[5]

There is a concentration of 11 species in the Western Ghats and Eastern Ghats of peninsular India and two species are recorded from Sri Lanka, one of which is endemic.[4]

Description

The most prominent characters of Perrottetia are the sub-oblique heliciform shell, often with whorls coiling around an oblique axis.[4] The last whorls do not descend below the preceding whorl, and short longitudinal furrows are present behind the apertural lip.[4] Internally, the aperture possesses two parietal lamellae.[4] Up to 2013, Perrottetia gudei was the only Perrottetia for which were published information about its internal anatomy.

The shell is oblique-heliciform, usually thin and opaque. Its surface is smooth and glossy but fine transverse ridges may be present. The embryonic shell is smooth. The 5–7 whorls increase regularly. The shell periphery is usually rounded and the last whorl does not descend below the preceding whorl but is parallel to the preceding suture. The outer wall of the last whorl generally possesses two short longitudinal furrows that correspond with internal apertural lamellae. The umbilicus is narrow and deep. The semi-ovate aperture has an expanded peristome with a reflexed lip. The apertural dentition consists of two parietal lamellae; palatal, basal and columellar lamellae are usually present; upper palatal and supracolumellar lamellae may also be present.[4]

Living animals possess a yellowish to reddish reticulated skin. The brown digestive gland and the black kidney are visible through the transparent shell. The upper tentacles are longer than the lower pair with a black eye-spot on the tip of the fully extended tentacle. Bright red or yellow retractor muscles show though the transparent skin. The foot is narrow, undivided. The tail short.[4]

Reproductive system: Genitalia has a long, slender penis. Penial sheath is short, about half of penis length. Internal wall of introverted penis with black to brown penial hooks. Vas deferens passes through a short section of penial sheath before connecting distally to penis. Vagina and free oviduct is short to long, vaginal hooks may be present. Gametolytic duct and sac may not extend as far as albumin gland. Seminal vesicle is present with about the same length from vesicle to talon.[4]

Species

Up to 2013, all nominal species of Perrottetia were described over a century ago and were often based on brief descriptions with poorly detailed figures.[4] Perrottetia was a poorly known genus with 27 nominal species prior to 2013.[4] Zoologists described several new species of Perrottetia in 2013-2017.

Species within the genus Perrottetia include:

  • Perrottetia aberrata (Souleyet, 1852)[3]
  • Perrottetia aquilonaria Siriboon & Panha, 2013[4][2]
  • Perrottetia beddomii (Blanford, 1899)
  • Perrottetia cristatellus (Möllendorff, 1901)[3]
  • Perrottetia daedaleus (Bavay & Dautzenberg, 1908)[2][3]
  • Perrottetia dermapyrrhosa Siriboon & Panha, 2013[4]
  • Perrottetia dugasti (Morlet, 1892)[2][3]
  • Perrottetia fruhstorferi (Möllendorff)
  • Perrottetia gregoi Thach, 2018
  • Perrottetia gudei (Fulton, 1915)[3]
  • Perrottetia heudei (Schmacker & Böttger, 1891)
  • Perrottetia hongthinhae D.-S. Do, 2017[3]
  • Perrottetia mabillei (Bavay et Dautzenberg, 1903)[3]
  • Perrottetia megadentata Inkhavilay & Panha, 2016[2]
  • Perrottetia messageri (Bavay et Dautzenberg, 1908)[3]
  • Perrottetia namdongensis Bui & Do V. N., 2019
  • Perrottetia oppidulum (Bavay et Dautzenberg, 1908)[3]
  • Perrottetia perrotteti (Petit de la Saussaye, 1841) - type species of the genus Perrottetia
  • Perrottetia phuphamanensis Siriboon & Panha, 2013[4]
  • Perrottetia simonianus (Heude, 1890)[3]
  • Perrottetia theobaldi (Benson, 1859)
  • Perrottetia unidentata Inkhavilay & Panha, 2016[2]
  • Perrottetia watsoni (Blanford, 1860)

Ecology

Some South Asian species of Perrottetia were discovered at high altitudes up to 4000 m above mean sea level.[4]

Species in the genus Perrottetia are carnivorous.[4]

gollark: Thrid.
gollark: Sceond.
gollark: Frist.
gollark: Because your name ≈ BAD.
gollark: pjals = n64c = i02p because pjals is too foolish to CONSISTENTLY use ONE name and instead USES three.

References

This article includes CC-BY-3.0 text from the reference[4]

  1. Kobelt W. (1905). In: Martini & Chemnitz Conch.-Cab. 1(12B): 91, 108.
  2. Inkhavilay, Khamla; Siriboon, Thanit; Sutcharit, Chirasak; Rowson, Ben; Panha, Somsak (2016-05-16). "The first revision of the carnivorous land snail family Streptaxidae in Laos, with description of three new species (Pulmonata, Stylommatophora, Streptaxidae)". ZooKeys. 589: 23–53. doi:10.3897/zookeys.589.7933. ISSN 1313-2970. PMC 4926661. PMID 27408533. Retrieved 2017-11-02.
  3. Do, Duc Sang (2017). "Checklist of the genus Perrottetia Kobelt, 1905 (Pulmonata: Streptaxidae) of Vietnam, with description of a new species". Folia Malacologica. 25 (2): 95–100. doi:10.12657/folmal.025.009. Retrieved 2017-11-02.
  4. Siriboon, T.; Sutcharit, C.; Naggs, F.; Panha, S. (2013). "Three new species of the carnivorous snail genus Perrottetia Kobelt, 1905 from Thailand (Pulmonata, Streptaxidae)". ZooKeys. 287: 41–57. doi:10.3897/zookeys.287.4572. PMC 3677355. PMID 23794847.
  5. 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.
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