Pittieria
Pittieria is a genus of predatory air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Spiraxidae.
Pittieria | |
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Drawing of apertural view of the shell of Pittieria aurantiaca | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | |
Phylum: | |
Class: | |
(unranked): | clade Heterobranchia clade Euthyneura clade Panpulmonata clade Eupulmonata clade Stylommatophora informal group Sigmurethra |
Superfamily: | |
Family: | |
Subfamily: | Euglandininae |
Genus: | Pittieria von Martens, 1901[1] |
Diversity[2] | |
14 species |
Distribution
The distribution of the genus Pittieria extends from Central Mexico to northern Panama.[2]
Species
Species in the genus Pittieria include:
Subgenus Pittieria Von Martens, 1901 include two[2] species:
Subgenus Laeviglandina Pilsbry, 1908 include nine[2] species:
- Pittieria aurantiaca (Angas, 1879)[2]
- Pittieria broctontomlini (Pilsbry, 1926)[2]
- Pittieria chiriquiensis (Da Costa, 1900)[2]
- Pittieria decidua (Pfeiffer, 1861)[2]
- Pittieria izabellina (Pfeiffer, 1846)[2]
- Pittieria lanceolata (Von Martens, 1891)[2]
- Pittieria obtusa (Pfeiffer, 1844)[2]
- Pittieria tryoniana Pilsbry, 1908[2]
- Pittieria underwoodi (Fulton, 1897)[2]
Subgenus Shuttleworthia H. B. Baker, 1941 include three[2] species:
- Pittieria ambigua (Pfeiffer, 1856)[2]
- Pittieria arborea H. B. Baker, 1941[2]
- Pittieria difficilis (Crosse and Fischer, 1869)[2]
gollark: As you go over that you probably have to keep adopting more and more norms and then guidelines and then rules and then laws to keep stuff coordinated.
gollark: Consider a silicon fab, which is used to make computer chips we need. That requires billions of $ in capital and thousands of people and probably millions more in supply chains.
gollark: Also, what do you mean "so what"? Technological progress directly affects standards of living.
gollark: ... that makes no sense that wouldn't even work.
gollark: Dunbar's number is 150 or so - humans can have meaningful social relationships with 150 or so people, apparently. Many systems require larger-scale coordination than this.
References
- Martens E. v. (1901). Biologia Centrali-Americana. Mollusca. 601-706. British Museum (Natural History). page 617.
- Thompson F. G. (16 June 2008). "AN ANNOTATED CHECKLIST AND BIBLIOGRAPHY OF THE LAND AND FRESHWATER SNAILS OF MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA" Archived 2012-10-12 at the Wayback Machine. "PART 4 PULMONATA (ACHATINOIDEA-SAGDOIDEA)" Archived 2016-06-02 at the Wayback Machine. accessed 14 January 2011.
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