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Lobosculum pustuloides

Image Usage Information

  • Howard Horne
  • CC BY-NC 4.0 DEED
  • Additional information about this specimen

Family: Polygyridae

Common name: Tiny Liptooth

Discovery: Bland, 1858

Identification

Width:  5.0-5.5 mm
Height: 2.5-2.7 mm
Whorls: 4-5

The shell of Lobosculum pustuloides is heliciform with a heavily-guarded aperture. The apex is low and the umbilicus is large and open. The denticles in the aperture are three: a blade-like parietal tooth, a pointed basal tooth upon a buttress, and a palatal lamella with a tooth upon the lower end. The effect is that of a notch in the outer lip. Sparse “hairs” adorn the periostracum.

Ecology

This animal lives among leaf litter, logs, or rocks in calcium-rich habitats (Hubricht, 1985).

Taxonomy

Synonyms for L. pustuloides are Polygyra pustuloides, Helix pustula, H. pustuloides, P. pustuloides.

Distribution

Lobosculum pustuloides is a Southeastern native, found from Florida and Mississippi, north to Kentucky and Virginia. In Virginia, specimens are reported only for Tazewell and Pittsylvania Counties. Maryland museum records warrant scrutiny.

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G4, Apparently Secure.
Virginia’s wildlife action plan: Tier III

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