Haplotrema
concavum (Say, 1821)
gray-foot lancetooth
Family
Haplotrematidae
Order Stylommatophora
The gray-foot
lancetooth is a fearsome predator among land snails. It
is large and versatile – from 11 to 21mm in diameter (Pilsbry,
1946) and able to attack other snails by entering
the aperture or rasping a hole in the shell. However, this
is snail is not exclusively a snail predator, eating nematodes
or plants as well.
The shell
of this lancetooth looks like it might have been made from
a coil of rolled clay because its whorls are tubular. It
is flattened - about half as tall as it is wide - and the
umbilicus is wide. The shell is a somewhat glossy gray,
pale yellowish or pale greenish color, and the animal is
gray.
Commonly
found in Pennsylvania forests, this animal occurs throughout
the eastern United States and Canada. Although there are
16 Haplotrema species in the West, it is one of
only two representatives of this genus in the East (Roth,
1991).
The gray-foot
lancetooth hunts by following the slime trails of other
land snails. Once it has latched onto its victim, whether
by entering through the aperture or a hole it has rasped
in the shell, it may drag the prey to a sheltered location
to feed (Atkinson,
1998). Presumably this reduces its own exposure
to predators. In an experiment, Pearce
and Gaertner (1996) showed how the gray-foot
lancetooth preferred snail prey that were larger, with larger
apertures and thinner shells.
Profile
by:
Ken Hotopp, 4/3/06
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