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Mesodon zaletus

Image Usage Information

  •  Tina Marie Camp Scheff
  • CC BY-NC 4.0 DEED
  • Additional information about this specimen

Family: Polygyridae

Common name: Toothed Globe

Discovery: A. Binney, 1837

Identification

Width: 24-27 mm
Height: 17-25 mm
Whorls: 5+

This snail’s shell is the largest of those that have a single parietal tooth (on the body whorl). That lamella can be quite small. The shell of Mesodon zaletus is relatively rounded and sturdy. The aperture lip is reflected and the umbilicus is closed. It is apparently a long-lived species and older shells may be whitish, especially at the apex, having lost the brown outer coating called the periostracum.

Ecology

Mesodon zaletus is a denizen of cool hardwood or mixed forests, often inhabiting steep slopes, especially along rivers. It may be found in leaf litter and occasionally in moss. Some of these animals can reach high elevations, living up to 5,000’ (Hubricht, 1985). In Tennessee, it has been associated with limestone areas in late-successional forests (Coney et al., 1982).

Taxonomy

Synonyms for M. zaletus include: Helix albolabris var. unidentata, H. exoleta, H. zaleta, Mesodon andrewsi, M. exoleta, and Polygyra zaleta.

Distribution

The range of M. zaletus extends from New York, southern Ontario and Michigan, to east Texas and northern Alabama. In Virginia this snail is found in the western counties on the West Virginia and Kentucky border.

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G5, Secure
NatureServe State Rank: Pennsylvania, S4S5, Apparently Secure; Virginia, S3S4, Vulnerable to Apparently Secure; otherwise unlisted in Northeastern States.

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