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> Hebetancylus excentricus (Morelet
1851)
> Habitat
&
Distribution
Basch (1963) gave the range of this limpet as Georgia, Florida and
Texas. My attention was called to the
occurrence of
Hebetancylus in South Carolina by J. R. Harrison, who discovered
a
population in a pond on the Dill Plantation south of Charleston several
years
ago (Harrison 1989). The pond is
frequented by migratory birds, and in fact serves as a study site for
ornithologists from the Charleston Museum.
Harrison and I were unable to find the limpet again in late
2004,
although high water conditions made collecting difficult. I have
since recorded Hebetancylus
populations from two other ponds in the Charleston area, however -
Drayton Hall Plantation and Charles Towne Landing State Park. The
limpets seem moderately common on
submerged sticks, logs, and large items of organic debris. I am
also aware of three populations in North Carolina.
Turner & Corkum (1979) reported simple annual life cycles in
several
Louisiana populations of Hebetancylus (type A of Dillon
2000:
156-162), one bivoltine (type C) population and one trivoltine
(perhaps Esii). Other life history
observations are
available in McMahon (1976). Harrison
(1989) reported that some of the individuals he collected from the Dill
Plantation population were septate, suggesting that they may have
passed a
period of dry or otherwise harsh environmental condition in
aestivation.
> Taxonomy
& Systematics
The presence of an apex distinctly off midline is generally considered
diagnostic for this species. McMahon
(2004) reported, however, that shell shape varied to such an extent in
one
Oklahoma population of limpets that no positive assignment could be
made
between Hebetancylus and Laevapex.
> Essay
Hebetancylus figured in a
November 2005 essay I posted to the FWGNA group on the aerial dispersal
of mollusca.
> Maps of Hebetancylus distribution
North Carolina
South
Carolina
> References
Basch, P. (1963) A review of the recent freshwater limpet
snails
of North America. Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. Harvard, 129, 399-461.
Dillon, R. T., Jr. (2000) The Ecology of Freshwater
Molluscs.
Cambridge University Press, United Kingdom. 509 pp.
Harrison, J.
R. (1989) The freshwater limpet Hebetancylus
excentricus (Morelet) in South Carolina (Abstract).
ASB Bulletin 36(2): 110. McMahon,
R. F. (1976) Growth,
reproduction and life cycle in six Texan populations of two species of
fresh-water limpets. Am. Midl. Nat. 95: 174-185.
McMahon, R.F. (2004) A 15-year
study of interannual shell-shape variation in a population of
freshwater
limpets. Amer. Malac. Bull. 19:101-
109. Turner, H. M. & K. C.
Corkum (1979) A seasonal and ecological survey of freshwater
limpet
snails (Pulmonata: Ancylidae) and their digenetic trematode parasites
in
southeastern Louisiana. Tulane Stud.
Zool. Bot. 21: 67 – 89.
Dr. Robert T. Dillon, Jr.
Department of Biology, College of
Charleston
Charleston, SC 29424
P: 843.953.8087
F: 843.953.5453