Anodontites
Anodontites is a genus of freshwater mussels, aquatic bivalve mollusks in the family Mycetopodidae.[2] Anodontites are present in South and Middle America, as far north as Mexico.[3]
Anodontites | |
---|---|
Anodontites trapesialis | |
Scientific classification | |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Bivalvia |
Order: | Unionida |
Family: | Mycetopodidae |
Subfamily: | Anodontitinae |
Genus: | Anodontites Bruguière 1792 |
Species | |
Species
The table below lists extant species:[4]
Scientific name | Authority | Distribution |
---|---|---|
A. aroana | H.B. Baker 1930 | |
A. carinata | Dunker 1858 | Widespread distribution from Guyana west to the Magdalena River, Colombia |
A. colombiensis | Marshall 1922 | Known from the Colorado River and adjacent streams in northern Colombia |
A. crispata | Bruguière 1792 | Widespread in tropical South America, north of the Paraná Basin |
A. cylindracea | Lea 1838 | Chiapas and Veracruz, Mexico |
A. depexus | Martens 1900 | Guatemala |
A. elongata | Swainson 1823 | Amazon Basin in Brazil, Peru and Colombia; the Magdalena River in Colombia; and the upper Paraguay in the Paraná Basin |
A. ferrarisii | d'Orbigny 1835 | Lower Paraná system |
A. guanarensis | Marshall 1927 | Venezuela |
A. iheringi | Clessin 1882 | Paraná and adjacent coastal streams in Brazil |
A. inaequivalva | Lea 1868 | Lake Nicaragua |
A. infossus | H.B. Baker 1930 | Northern Venezuela |
A. leotaudi | Guppy 1866 | Venezuela and Trinidad |
A. lucida | d'Orbigny 1835 | Paraná and adjacent coastal streams in Brazil, Uruguay and Argentina |
A. moricandii | Lea 1860 | Lower São Francisco and Atlantic streams as far south as Rio de Janeiro, Brazil |
A. obtusa | Spix & Wagner 1827 | Disjunct distribution in the Tapajos River in the Amazon Basin, the São Francisco River and adjacent coastal streams, and the Piracicaba in the upper Paraná basin |
A. patagonica | Lamarck 1819 | Widespread in the Paraná and adjacent coastal basins. |
A. pittieri | Marshall 1922 | Venezuela |
A. schomburgianus | Sowerby 1870 | Described from British Guyana |
A. solenidea | Sowerby 1867 | From the São Francisco south to the Paraná in Brazil, Paraguay, and Argentina |
A. tehuantepecensis | Crosse & Fischer 1893 | Mexico and Central America |
A. tenebricosa | Lea 1834 | Widespread upper Amazon, coastal streams of southern Brazil and the Paraná Basin, South America |
A. tortilis | Lea 1852 | Guyanas, Venezuela and Colombia, north to Costa Rica |
A. trapesialis | Lamarck 1819 | Widespread in South America from the Paraná System through the Amazon Basin and northern drainages, and north to Mexico |
A. trapezea | Spix & Wagner 1827 | Paraná and Rio São Francisco basins, west to the upper Amazon |
A. trigona | Spix & Wagner 1827 |
Four species are known from fossils (three exclusively so):[1]
Species | Authors | Formation | Country | Refs |
---|---|---|---|---|
†Anodontites batesi | Woodward 1871 | Pebas Formation | Peru | [5] |
†Anodontites capax | Conrad 1874 | Pebas Formation | Peru | [6] |
†Anodontites laciranus | De Porta 1966 | Santa Teresa Formation | Colombia | [7] |
Anodontites trapesialis | Lamarck 1819 | Solimões Formation | Brazil | [8] |
References
- "Anodontites Bruguière 1792". Paleobiology Database. Fossilworks. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
- "Anodontites Bruguière, 1792". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
- Marshall, William B. (1932). "Anodontites: A genus of South and Central American and Mexican pearly fresh-water mussels". Proceedings of the United States National Museum. 79: article 23.
- "The Mussel Project". Retrieved August 8, 2017.
- Fossilworks
- Fossilworks
- Acosta & Ulloa, 2002, p.64
- Fossilworks
Bibliography
- Acosta Garay, Jorge, and Carlos E. Ulloa Melo. 2002. Geología de la Plancha 227 La Mesa - 1:100,000, 1–80. INGEOMINAS.
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