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Anguispira mordax

superior of appalachian tigersnail shell measuring just over one inch
inferior view of the shell, showing aperture measures nearly one half inch wide
profile of shell showing shell is distinctly striated

Image Usage Information

  • Barb Graham
  • CC BY-NC 4.0 DEED
  • Additional information about this specimen

Family: Discidae

Common name: Appalachian Tigersnail or Appalachian Disc

Discovery: Shuttleworth, 1852

Identification

Width: 16 – 18 mm
Height: 6 mm
Whorls: 5.5

The shell of this species is somewhat flat but still has a notable a curve in the apex. The carina is well defined but not particularly sharp. The lip on the A. mordax is thin. The shell is yellow with interrupted red streaks that run in bands parallel to the radial ribs. These ribs are big and wide, sometimes up to 1 mm apart, giving the shell texture a wavy look.

Ecology

Anguispira mordax is found in a wide range of habitats similar to A. alternata (Hubricht, 1985). Kutchka (1940) reports this animal on basswood and tuliptree logs.

Taxonomy

There’s some uncertainty about the taxonomy of this animal (Pilsbry, 1946-8).  Hubricht (1985) says A. mordax is only pure in North Carolina, and elsewhere hybridizes with other species in the same genus.

Synonyms for A. mordax are: Anguispira alternata mordax, A. a. lawae, A. a. paucicostata, A. a. smithi, A. cumberlandiana Columba, A. smithi, A Columba, A. paucicostata, A. mordax paucicostata, Helix mordax, and Pyramidula alternata mordax. 

Distribution

This species has been found in Alabama, Kentucky, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and West Virginia.  It is found in north-western Virginia and along the border with West Virginia. 

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G4

Author: Ken Hotopp
Publication date: 7/2012, 2/2018

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