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Strobilops texasianus

Image Usage Information

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

Family: Strobilopsidae

Common name: Southern Pinecone

Discovery: Pilsbry and Ferriss, 1906

Identification

Width: 2.4 mm
Height: 2 mm
Whorls: 5.5

The apex of this species’ shell is rounded, and the umbilicus is open but narrow. The reflected aperture forms a thick, slightly off-center half-circle, and a lamella extends along the top inside. The shell is brown. The radial ridges extend uninterrupted onto the bottom.

Ecology

Strobilops texasianus is found on old logs and in leaf litter. In Tennessee, Coney et al (1982) found this animal to be associated with leaf litter, with an affinity for steeper slopes and damper habitats than S. aeneus.

Taxonomy

Synonyms for S. texasianus are Strobilops aenea spiralis, S. labyrinthica texasiana, S. l. form parietalis, S. lonsdalei, S. parietalis, S. texasiana, and S. t. floridana.

Distribution

This animal is mostly found in the Southeast, From the Atlantic Coast, where it is frequent, west to Texas. In Virginia it is found in the eastern counties, particularly along the shore.

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G5
NatureServe State Rank: S3

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