Freshwater Molluscan Shells
Hydrocenidae,
Valvatidae, and other freshwater snails
Hydrocenidae
Minute amphibious snails classified with
the old archeogastropoda, native to eastern
and southern Asia, and southern Europe. One
species is listed for southern Africa by
Pilsbry and Becquaert (1927) "[They] are
more or less amphibious dwellers in wet
vegetation, clinging to the faces of rocks
continually washed by the spray from
waterfalls" (Preston, 1915). He lists
eight species for the Indian subcontinent

Georissa japonica Pilsbry, 1900. x8. Japan
Valvatidae
Small wide-spired
operculate snails, commonly refered to as
valve snails, egg-laying and hermaphroditic.
Burch (1982) lists 11 North American species.
11 are also listed for the former USSR by
Zhadin (1952) while only two are listed for
India, and one for Africa. Banarescu includes
the following genera;
Valvata;
(several subgenera listed by both Banarescu
and Burch) throughout Europe, northern Asia,
and North America.
Borysthenia;
Eastern and central Europe.
Gagea; Endemic
in Lake Ohrid.
They have a featherlike gill,
visible on the left side outside the shell
when the snail is active (Brown, 1991), and a
ciliated pallial tentacle extending out to
the right. Please see the Animal Diversity
Web http://animaldiversity.ummz.umich.edu/site/accounts/information/Valvatidae.html
for pictures of living Valvata snails. Dillon
(2000) says of this little studied group,
that some researchers have reported
filter-feeding behaviour, while others have
concluded they are strictly grazers. Shell
characteristics may be variable. For instance
the species V. tricarinata occurs in
forms having differing numbers and locations
of spiral carinae or angulations. Several
such forms may occur within a single
population (William Heard, in Burch, 1982).
Valvata stenotrema (Polinski) Lake Ohrid, Macedonia. x8.
Valvata bicarinata Lea 1841 American midwest and northeast. x8.

Megalovalvata demersa (Lindholm, 1909) Lake Baikal. x8.
Potamididae
A few members of this
marine or brackish water family have adapted
to fresh waters. Most inhabit marginally
marine environments in the tropics.
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Telescopium telescopium
(Linnaeus, 1758) Brandt
(1974) indicates this is a snail
of "muddy irrigation trenches,
drainages and swamps in the
mud flats." Native to much of
Southeast Asia. |
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Cerithidea cingulata
(Gmelin, 1790) Native
to
Thailand. This image,
and the photographs
below are from Brandt (1974). |
Buccinidae
Carniverous gastropods related to the
marine whelks. Two freshwater genera, Clea
and Afrocanidia.
Brandt (1974) describes and pictures six Clea
(subgenus Anentome) species, but
could only confirm Clea helena for
the territory of Thailand. He says of Clea
helena that it is the only species in
Thailand that is "not restricted to
running water as it is also found in lakes
and ponds", and that it "feeds
predominantly on decaying protein, but has
been observed to attack living snails and
worms."
Clea has been offered for sale in
the pet trade and the possibility exists for
it to become invasive. Harry Lee includes
this and other information on the genus at http://www.listserv.uga.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0712B&L=conch-l&P=R722&D=1&H=0&O=T&T=1. He also posted a listing of
species at http://www.listserv.uga.edu/cgi-bin/wa?A2=ind0712B&L=conch-l&P=R1895&D
=1&H=0&O=T&T=1.
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Clea helena (Philippi,
1847) (Left)
Widespread, Southeast
Asia, Indonesia.
Variable. x3.
Clea scalarina (Deshayes, 1876)
(Right)
Mekong River. Slightly
magnified. |
| Nassariidae Nassa
mudsnails, characteristic of tidal
mudflats, have also invaded fresh
waters.
Banarescu (1990) mentions
Pygmaenassa - India,
Nassodonta - East Asia, and
Arcularia - Lake Chilka,
Burma.
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Nassodonta dorri
(Wattebled, 1886) Viet
Nam.
Photo Bill Frank, webmaster
Jaxshells.org. x3. |
Marginellidae

Rivomarginella morrisoni Brandt, 1968.
x4
Rivers, lakes, and canals along
the Gulf of Thailand. One
freshwater species "Known from Thailand
only" (Brandt, 1974).
Pyramidellidae

Morrisonietta siamensis Brandt, 1968. x10
Prefers brackish water of low
salinity. Several species endemic
to various localities in Southeast Asia (Brandt,
1974).
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