Pseudofusulus
Common and albinistic colour forms of Pseudofusulus varians
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Heterobranchia
Order: Stylommatophora
Family: Clausiliidae
Subfamily: Clausiliinae
Tribe: Clausiliini
Genus: Pseudofusulus
Nordsieck, 1977[1]
Species:
P. varians
Binomial name
Pseudofusulus varians
Synonyms[3]
  • Helix (Clausilia) diaphana C. Pfeiffer, 1828
  • Helix (Clausilia) varians C. Pfeiffer, 1828

Pseudofusulus varians is a species of air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Clausiliidae.

Genus Pseudofusulus is monotypic genus (contains one species only) with Pseudofusulus varians as its type species.

It is a relict species from Atlantic period of the Holocene, inhabiting exclusively nature beech and scree forests in Europe.[4]

Distribution

The distribution of this species is Eastern Alpine and Western Carpathian.[5] The type locality is the High Alps in Styria, Austria.[2]

The key area of its range is in the Western Alps (from the south-western part of the Alps to Croatia, and also to the Dolomites in the southern Tyrol).[4]

  • Austria[4]
  • Germany[4]
  • Czech Republic – 7 confirmed sites in Ore Mountains in Bohemia,[4] locally extinct in Moravia.[4] Already Vojen Ložek has been calling for the effective conservation of this species in the 1980s.[4][6] It is one of the most endangered species in the Czech Republic, restricted to hidden and undisturbed natural deciduous forests.[7] Originally it was known from 16 sites in the Ore Mountains (Krušné Hory Mts.), in the northwestern Bohemia, Czech Republic and one site on the slope of Smrk Mount in the Moravian-Silesian Beskids (Moravskoslezské Beskydy Mts.), East Moravia, Czech Republic.[4]
    • extinct in Moravia: The forest at the only (but well populated) locality in the Moravia has been seriously damaged by air pollution from factories (such as Třinec Iron and Steel Works and others) jointly with the 20 °C dropping of temperatures in inversion on 31 December 1978.[4] The nearly all pollution-damaged stand died out at the southwestern slope on the Smrk Mount.[4]
    • in Bohemia: The occurrence of the snail was recently confirmed only at seven sites in the Krušné Hory Mts.[4] Remaining sites were destroyed due to human impacts, mainly acid rains and insensitive forest management[4] mainly due to removal of dead wood and clearcutting.[7] Therefore, its populations survived only in forest patches hidden in hardly accessible places.[4]
  • Slovakia – in the eastern part of Low Tatras, in the peak level of Poľana, Klenovský Vepor Mount in the Vepor Mountains, Muránska planina and the Ondrejsko in Slovak Paradise is the easternmost.[4] All of these records in the Slovakia are coming from 1960s–1970s and there has been no verification since.[4]
  • Croatia[4]
  • Italy
  • and others
shells of Pseudofusulus varians

Description

The shell is horny or greenish brown and finely ribbed.[7] The shell has 9–10 whorls.[7] The apertural margin is detached.[7] Columellaris is deep inside and forked, hardly visible in a perpendicular view.[7] Palatal wall is white and prominent.[7] There is no lunula.[7] Subcolumellaris is very close to basal furrow, visible in an oblique view.[7] Clausilium is not very concave.[7]

The width of the shell is 2.2–3 mm.[7] The height of the shell is 9–12 mm.[7]

Habitat

Pseudofusulus varians is very exacting on the quality of its environment and its populations are small and quite scattered in the whole of its range.[4]

It lives in virgin-like forests[5] and old-growth forest with fallen dead wood (coarse woody debris) in montane and submontane.[4] It is found in humid and shady habitats in woods, under ground litter and stones, in mountains.[7] In the Czech Republic it is strictly associated with trees, restricted to undisturbed and hardly accessible natural beech forests.[7] Pseudofusulus varians is strictly dendrophilous species, so the main threat is dead wood removing and clearcutting.[4]

As it is endangered in the whole Europe, it is very important to protect its modern sites.[4]

References

This article incorporates public domain text from the reference[7] and CC-BY-3.0 text from the reference[4]

  1. (in German) Nordsieck H. (1977). "Zur Anatomie und Systematik der Clausilien, XVIII. Neue Taxa rezenter Clausilien". Archiv für Molluskenkunde 108(1/3): 73–107. page 96.
  2. 1 2 (in German) Pfeiffer C. (1828). "Naturgeschichte deutscher Land- und Süsswasser-Mollusken". Dritte Abtheilung. pp. I-VI, 1–84 pp., Taf. I-VIII. Weimar. (Landes-Industrie-Comptoir). p. 40, Taf. 7, Fig. 24-25.
  3. "Pseudofusulus". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  4. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 (in Czech) Lacina A. (2011). "Poznámky k ekologii, rozšíření a ochraně vřetence horského (Pseudofusulus varians) v České republice. [Notes to the ecology, distribution and protection of Pseudofusulus varians in the Czech Republic]". Malacologica Bohemoslovaca 10: 18–23. PDF.
  5. 1 2 (in Czech) Lacina A. & Horsák M. (2009). "Jak se vede vřetenatci horskému – z červené knihy našich měkkýšů" ["Is the land Snail Pseudofusulus varinas Doing Well? From the Czech Republic's Red Book of Molluscs"]. Živa, Praha LVII(2): 73–74. English abstract.
  6. (in Czech) Ložek V. (1985). "Z červené knihy našich měkkýšů – je ohrožen vřetenec horský?". Živa 33: 221.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 "Species summary for Pseudofusulus varians". AnimalBase, last modified 23 March 2011, accessed 27 April 2011.
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