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>
Goniobasis ebenum
(Lea 1841)
("Elimia ebenum")
> Habitat
& Distribution
Goodrich (1940) restricted the distribution of G. ebenum
to
the
Cumberland River and its tributaries in Kentucky and Tennessee, and
Stewart & Dillon did not include the species in their (2004) Virginia
review. But the range of G. ebenum apparently
extends into West Virginia and includes many other rivers and streams
draining west off the Cumberland Plateau.
In 2007 we were
surprised to discover a population inhabiting tributaries of the Big Sandy drainage in
Dickenson County, VA.
> Ecology
& Life history
This and other pleurocerids are grazers of epilithic periphyton (Harman
2000). Where they reach high densities, grazing by pleurocerid
populations can have a significant effect on energy flow in streams
(Dillon 2000: 86 - 91).
Like other pleurocerids, G. ebenum is
dioecious, eggs being
deposited on hard substrates from spring to mid-summer. Eggs are
spirally arranged in masses of 2-15 or more, with a tough, membranous
outer covering (Smith 1980, Jokinen 1992). Although we are unaware of
any study specifically directed toward the life history of G. ebenum, it seems
reasonable to expect that two years
will be
required for maturity, and that several years of iteroparous
reproduction can be expected thereafter, as is the case for
pleurocerids generally (Dazo 1965). This is life cycle G of Dillon
(2000: 156 - 162).
> Taxonomy
& Systematics
Burch
(1989) and Turgeon et al. (1998) assigned this species to the genus Elimia.
But Elimia (H. & A. Adams 1854) is a
composite group, explicitly rejected by Tryon, Walker, Pilsbry and
Goodrich (Dillon 1989).
>
Essay
See my 28Sept04 post to the FWGNA web site for a review of the Goniobasis/Elimia
taxonomic
controversy.
>References
Burch, J.B. 1989. North American
Freshwater Snails. Malacological Publications, Hamburg,
Michigan. Dazo,
B. C. 1965. The morphology and natural history of Pleurocera
acuta and Goniobasis livescens
(Gastropoda: Cerithiacea: Pleuroceridae). Malacologia 3: 1 - 80. Dillon,
R., T. Jr. 1989. Karyotypic evolution in pleurocerid snails:
I. Genomic DNA estimated by flow cytometry. Malacologia, 31: 197-203. Dillon,
R.T., Jr. 2000. The Ecology of Freshwater Molluscs.
Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, United Kingdom. Goodrich,
C. (1940) The Pleuroceridae of the Ohio River drainage
system. Occas. Pprs. Mus. Zool. Univ. Mich., 417: 1-21.
Harman,
W.N. 1972. Benthic substrates: their effect on fresh-water
Mollusca. Ecology 53: 271-277. Harman,
W.N. 2000. Diminishing species richness of mollusks in Oneida
Lake, New York State, USA. Nautilus 114:120-126. Jokinen,
E.H. 1992. The Freshwater Snails (Mollusca:
Gastropoda)
of New York State. NY State Mus Bull 482, Albany, New York. Smith,
D.G. 1980. Goniobasis virginica Gastropoda
Pleuroceridae in the Connecticut River USA. Nautilus 94:50-54. 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. Turgeon,
D.D. et al. 1998. Common and Scientific Names of
Aquatic
Invertebrates from the United States and Canada: Mollusks.
Amer Fish Soc Sp Pub 26, Bethesda, Maryland.
Robert
T. Dillon, Jr.
Department of Biology, College
of
Charleston
Charleston, SC 29424
P: 843.953.8087
F: 843.953.5453