Cerastidae

Cerastidae is a family of air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the order Stylommatophora.[2]

Cerastidae
Drawing of apertural and abapertural view of the shell of Rhachistia rhodotaenia.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Heterobranchia
Superorder: Eupulmonata
Order: Stylommatophora
Suborder: Helicina
Infraorder: Pupilloidei
Superfamily: Pupilloidea
Family: Cerastidae
Wenz, 1923[1]
Synonyms[2]
  • Cerastuidae Wenz, 1930
  • Pachnodidae Steenberg, 1925

Genera

  • Achatinelloides Nevill, 1878[3]
  • Altenaia Zilch, 1972
  • Amimopina Solem, 1964[4]
  • Archeorachis Schileyko, 1998
  • Cerastus E. von Martens, 1860
  • Conulinus E. von Martens, 1895
  • Darwininitium Budha & Mordan, 2012
  • Euryptyxis P. Fischer, 1883
  • Gittenedouardia Bank & Menkhorst, 2008[5]
  • Hoqia Neubert, 2005[6]
  • Limicena Connolly, 1925[7]
  • Microscintilla Neubert, 2002[8]
  • Nesiocerastus Van Mol & Coppois, 1980
  • Nesobia Ancey, 1887
  • Pachnodus E. von Martens, 1860
  • Paracerastus Thiele, 1934
  • Passamaella Clessin, 1878[9]
  • Pleurorhachis Connolly, 1938
  • Polychordia Connolly, 1941
  • Rachis Albers, 1850[10]
  • Rhachidina Thiele, 1911[11]
  • Rhachistia Connolly, 1925[7]
  • Soqena Neubert, 2005[6]
  • Zebrinops Thiele, 1931

Description

Anatomically speaking, there is no flagellum in the reproductive system of snails in the family Cerastidae, and this is what distinguishes this family from its sister group the family Enidae.[12]

References

  1. Wenz, W. (1923). Fossilium Catalogus I: Animalia. Gastropoda extramarina tertiaria. Berlin: W. Junk.
  2. MolluscaBase eds. (2020). MolluscaBase. Cerastidae Wenz, 1923. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at: http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=738097 on 2020-12-31
  3. Nevill, G. (1878). Hand List of Mollusca in the Indian Museum, Calcutta. Part I. Gastropoda. Pulmonata and Prosobranchia-Neurobranchia. Calcutta: Trustees of the Indian Museum.
  4. Solem, A. (1964). Aminopina, an Australian enid land snail. The Veliger, 6(3), 115–120.
  5. Bank, R. A. & Menkhorst, H. P. (2008). Notes on the nomenclature of some land- and freshwater molluscs of the Seychelles, with consequences for taxa from Africa, Madagascar, India, the Philippines, Jamaica, and Europe. Basteria, 72, 93–110.
  6. Neubert, E. (2005). The continental malacofauna of Arabia and adjacent areas. IV. Revision of the family Cerastidae in the Soqotran Archipelago. I. The genus Passamaella Pfeiffer, 1877, with a description of a new genus and species (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Cerastidae). Archiv für Molluskenkunde, 134(1), 1–21.
  7. Connolly, M. (1925). The non-marine Mollusca of Portuguese East Africa. Transactions of the Royal Society of South Africa, 12, 105–220.
  8. Neubert, E. (2002). The continental malacofauna of Arabia and adjacent areas. I. Terrestrial molluscs of Samha and Darsa Islands (al-Ikhwan), Socotra Archipelago, Yemen. Fauna of Arabia, 19, 245–259.
  9. Clessin, S. (1878). Aus meiner Novitäten-Mappe. Malakozoologische Blätter, 25, 122–129.
  10. Albers, J. C. (1850). Die Heliceen, nach natürlicher Verwandtschaft systematisch geordnet. Berlin: Th. Chr. Fr. Enslin.
  11. Thiele, J. (1911). Mollusken der Deutschen Zentralafrika-Expedition. Wissenschaftliche Ergebnisse der Deutschen Zentral-Afrika-Expedition 1907–1908 Unter Führung Adolf Friedrichs, Herzogs zu Mecklenburg, 3, 175–214.
  12. Mordan, P. B. (1992). The morphology and phylogeny of the Cerastuinae (Pulmonata: Pupilloidea). Bulletin of the British Museum, Natural History, Zoology, 58, 1–20.


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