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> Helisoma anceps (Menke 1830)
> Habitat & Distribution
H. anceps ranges throughout
most of North America, from western Canada to the southeastern United
States. It is typically found in waters with at least a little
current, and is more common on solid substrates than its congener H. trivolvis. It is also not
as typical of rich or eutrophic environments as H. trivolvis. Populations of H. anceps extend from the mountains
to the coastal plain, but are especially common in the Piedmont
ecoregion.
> Ecology & Life history
Helisoma anceps is smaller and
more benthic than the better-known H.
trivolvis, at least here in the southern Atlantic drainages, and hence seems more
the grazer and less the browser of macrophytes. For an ecological
comparison of the two species in Canada see Pip (1987).
Reproduction is annual and semelparous, at least in the better-studied
northern populations (Herrmann & Harman 1975, Jokinen 1985).
Like all planorbids, H. anceps
supports an ample share of predators (Brown & Strouse 1988, Weber
& Lodge 1990) and trematode parasites (Fernandez & Esch 1991,
Esch et al. 1997, Zelmer & Esch 1998).
> Taxonomy & Systematics
The classification
of the Planorbidae proposed by the tag team of Baker (1945) and
Hubendick (1955) remains, after 50 years, the basis for our
understanding of this large and diverse family of pulmonates worldwide.
Helisoma anceps is distinct
and well-characterized. To my knowledge there has been no confusion
regarding its identification or systematic placement. Helisoma antrosa is a common synonym.
> Essay #1
The Classification of the Planorbidae. 1 Figure.
> Maps of Helisoma distribution
Click the small map to enlarge
it, or download the state-specific PDFs
North Carolina (PDF)
South Carolina (PDF)
Georgia (PDF)
>References
Baker, F. (1945) The Molluscan
Family Planorbidae. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. Baker, H. B. (1946) Index to F.C. Baker's "The Molluscan Family Planorbidae." Nautilus, 59,
127-41. Brown, K., & B.
Strouse (1988) Relative vulnerability of six freshwater
gastropods to the leech Nephelopsis
obscura (Verrill). Freshw. Biol., 19: 157-165. Cummins, K., & G. Lauff
(1969) The influence of substrate particle size on the
microdistribution of stream macrobenthos. Hydrobiologia, 34: 145-181. Esch, G.W., Wetzel, E.J.,
Zelmer, D.A. & Schotthoefer, A.M. (1997) Long-term
changes in parasite population and community structure: A case
history. Am. Midl. Nat. 137: 369-387. Fernandez, J. & Esch, G.W.
(1991) The component community structure of larval
trematodes in the pulmonate snail Helisoma
anceps. J. Parasitol. 77: 540-550. Herrmann, S. A. & Harman, W. N.
(1975) Population studies on Helisoma anceps (Menke)
(Gastropoda: Planorbidae). Nautilus 89: 5-11. Hubendick, B. (1955) Phylogeny in the Planorbidae. Trans. Zool. Soc. London 28: 453-542. Jokinen, E. (1985) Comparative life history patterns within a littoral zone snail
community. Verh. Internat. Verein, Limnol., 22: 3292-3399. Laman, T., N. Boss, & H.
Blankespoor (1984) Depth distribution of seven species of
gastropods in Douglas Lake, Michigan. Nautilus, 98: 20-24. Pip, E. (1987)
Ecological differentiation within genus Helisoma (Gastropoda: Planorbidae)
in central Canada. Nautilus101: 33-44. Weber, L.M. & Lodge, D.M. (1990) Periphytic food and predatory crayfish: Relative roles in determining
snail distribution. Oecologia 82: 33-39. Zelmer, D.A. & Esch, G.W. (1998) Bridging the GAP: The odonate naiad as a paratenic host for Halipegus occidualis (Trematoda:
Hemiuridae). J. Parasitol. 84: 94-96.
Robert T. Dillon, Jr.
Department of Biology, College of
Charleston
Charleston, SC 29424
P: 843.953.8087
F: 843.953.5453