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Inflectarius rugeli

Image Usage Information

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

Family: Polygyridae

Common name: Deep-tooth Shagreen

Discovery: Shuttleworth, 1852

Identification

Width: 11-15 mm
Height: 7-9 mm
Whorls: 5+

This animal has a very constricted aperture, with large teeth almost blocking the small opening. The parietal tooth is strong and curved; the tooth on the outer lip is recessed; and the small basal tooth is somewhat pointed. The lip is heavily reflected, and guttered behind. The umbilicus of this low, heliciform shell is closed.

The shell of Inflectarius rugeli is covered in a microscopic scale-like sculpture, as others in its genus. These scales follow the pattern of the radial striae, but may be worn down in older shells. The live animal is gray above, paler below.

Ecology

This animal can be found under leaf litter, logs and other features on wooded hills (Coney et al, 1982; Hubricht, 1985).

Taxonomy

Synonyms for I. rugeli include Helix rugeli, Mesodon rugeli, Polygyra rugeli, and Triodopsis rugeli.

Distribution

Inflectarius rugeli lives in the southern Appalachian Mountains, from southern Illinois and West Virginia south to Alabama. In Virginia it occurs only in the far western counties.

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G5
NatureServe State Rank: Virginia, S3S4, Vulnerable to Apparently Secure; West Virginia, SNR, Not Ranked.

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