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Oxychilus cellarius

Image Usage Information

  •  James Bailey
  • CC BY-NC 4.0 DEED
  • Additional information about this specimen

Family: Oxychilidae

Common name: Cellar Glass-snail

Discovery: Müller, 1774

Non-native

Identification

Width: 9-12 mm
Height: 4+ mm
Whorls: 5+

Oxychilus cellarius has a flattened, heliciform, clear-yellowish shell with fine radial growth lines. The umbilicus is open and the lip simple. The animal is blue-gray in color.

Ecology

In western European, this species is a common snail found in moist, shaded habitats, including forest, rock features, gardens, brushpiles, and caves (Kerney & Cameron, 1979). In North America it is found in anthropogenic habitats – yards and gardens, trash piles, and cellars (Pilsbry, 1946).

Taxonomy

Synonyms of O. cellarius include Helix cellarius, H. glyphyra, Zonites cellarius, and Oxychilus pulchro-striatum.

Distribution

This species has been introduced to North America from Europe. In North America it is known mainly from southern Canada, the West Coast, and the Northeast. In Virginia it is reported from several counties, with clusters in the Ridge-and-Valley.

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G5
NatureServe State Rank: not listed

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