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>
Leptoxis carinata
(Brug. 1792)
>
Leptoxis dilatata
(Conrad 1835)
> Habitat &
Distribution
Leptoxis carinata ranges through Atlantic
Coastal drainages
from New York to North Carolina (Burch 1989, Parodiz 1956, Jokinen
1992). There
is no distinguishable difference between L. carinata and L. dilatata,
populations of which inhabit the New River drainage of southern
Virginia and northwestern North Carolina. Within their
respective
ranges they inhabit streams and rivers with moderate to strong current
and abundant rocky substratum (Miller 1985, Stewart and Garcia 2002).
> Ecology
& Life history
Stewart & Garcia (2002) reported that topographic complexity of
substratum (i.e., rock abundance) was the primary cause of local
variation in Leptoxis carinata
densities and total biomass in a Virginia piedmont stream. Density and
biomass were greatest in topographically complex plots with boulders
and cobble that provide ideal foraging habitat for these periphyton
scrapers, as well as refuge from high-flow events. In such
environments, Leptoxis carinata densities can
exceed 500
individuals per square meter, and this species can constitute more than
80% of total macroinvertebrate biomass (Miller 1985; Stewart and Garcia
2002; Stewart and Dillon 2004). In addition to grazing on
rock-inhabiting diatoms and other algae, L. carinata can
obtain energy and nutrients through shredding leaves (Dillon &
Davis 1991, Dillon 2000).
Like all pleurocerids, L. carinata is dioecious.
Aldridge
(1982) and Jokinen (1992) reported semelparous reproduction in northern
populations, adults maturing in two years (life cycle Hs
of
Dillon 2000:156-162). Eggs are deposited on hard substrates in the
spring or summer, singly or in masses up to an average of 170-400 eggs
per female.
> Taxonomy
& Systematics
The nomen Leptoxis dilatata is likely a junior
synonym of L. carinata. Leptoxis carinata
has itself appeared in the literature under a variety of synonyms,
including Anculosa carinata, Leptoxis nickliniana, Melania
nickliniana, Mudalia carinata, Nitrocris carinata, and Spirodon
carinata (Goodrich 1921, Stewart and Dillon 2004).
Parodiz (1956) offered a lovely figure of the shell
morphological variation in a single populationof L. carinata from
Smith River, Virginia.
>Pretty photo
Living L. carinata, courtesy
of Chris Lukhaup.
>Maps of Leptoxis carinata
distribution
Click the small map to enlarge
it, or download the state-specific PDF
North Carolina
(PDF)
>References
Aldridge, D.W. 1982. Reproductive tactics in
relation to life-cycle bioenergetics in three natural populations of
the freshwater snail, Leptoxis carinata. Ecology
63:196-208. Brown, K.M. 2001. Mollusca:
Gastropoda. In: J.H. Thorp and A.P. Covich, eds.,
Ecology and Classification of North American Freshwater
Invertebrates, Academic Press, New York. Pp. 297-329. Burch,
J.B. 1989. North American Freshwater Snails.
Malacological Publications, Hamburg, Michigan. Dillon, R.T.,
Jr. 2000. The Ecology of Freshwater Molluscs.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Dillon,
R.T., and K.B. Davis. 1991. The diatoms ingested by
freshwater snails: temporal, spatial, and interspecific variation.
Hydrobiologia 210: 233-242. Goodrich, C. 1921.
Anculosae north of the Alabama drainage. Nautilus 35:9-12. Jokinen,
E.H. 1992. The Freshwater Snails (Mollusca:
Gastropoda) of New York State. NY State Mus Bull 482,
Albany, New York. Miller, C. 1985.
Correlates of habitat favourability for benthic macroinvertebrates at
five stream sites in an Appalachian mountain drainage basin, USA.
Freshw Biol 15:709-733. Parodiz,
J. J. (1956) Notes on the freshwater snail Leptoxis (Mudalia) carinata.
Annals of the Carnegie Museum 33: 391 - 405. Stewart,
T.W., and R.T. Dillon, Jr.
2004. Species composition and geographic distribution of
Virginia’s freshwater gastropod fauna: a review using
historical
records. Amer Malac Bull 19:79-91. Stewart, T.W., and J.E.
Garcia. 2002. Environmental factors causing local variation
in density and biomass of the snail Leptoxis carinata,
in Fishpond Creek, Virginia. Amer Midl Natur 148:172-180.
Robert
T. Dillon, Jr.
Department of Biology, College
of
Charleston
Charleston, SC 29424
P: 843.953.8087
F: 843.953.5453