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Striatura ferrea

Image Usage Information

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

Family: Gastrodontidae

Common name: Black Striate

Discovery: E.S. Morse, 1864

Identification

Width: 2.5-3 mm
Height: 1.4 mm
Whorls: 3+

Striatura ferrea has a beautiful, finely-textured shell, appearing almost silky, and it is larger than the other striates. The shell has low radial ridges and delicate spiral striae. The live animal is very dark in color, while the shell is usually silvery or steel gray. The open umbilicus is much narrower than that of its relatives, measuring less than half a millimeter in diameter. The aperture is large and rounded, with a simple lip.

Ecology

Like its relatives, S. ferrea lives in leaf litter in hardwood forests, though usually at low-to-moderate densities and never abundant (e.g. Hotopp, 2002; Beier et al, 2012). In Maine it was found to be most frequent at dry, acid forest sites (Nekola, 2008).

Taxonomy

This species has also been known as Striatura (Striaturops) ferrea and Zonites ferreus.

Distribution

Striatura ferrea is found from the Smoky Mountains north through the Appalachian Mountains to Maine and west to Michigan. In Virginia, there are museum records for scattered western counties, but it also probably occurs in some northern counties (e.g. Hubricht, 1985).

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G5
NatureServe State Rank: S3

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