• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Carnegie Museum of Natural History

One of the Four Carnegie Museums of Pittsburgh

  • Visit
    • Buy Tickets
    • Visitor Information
    • Exhibitions
    • Events
    • Dining at the Museum
    • Celebrate at the Museum
    • Powdermill Nature Reserve
    • Event Venue Rental
  • Learn
    • Field Trips
    • Educator Information
    • Programs at the Museum
    • Bring the Museum to You
    • Guided Programs FAQ
    • Programs Online
    • Climate and Rural Systems Partnership
  • Research
    • Scientific Sections
    • Science Stories
    • Science Videos
    • Senior Science & Research Staff
    • Museum Library
    • Science Seminars
    • Scientific Publications
    • Specimen and Artifact Identification
  • About
    • Mission & Commitments
    • Directors Team
    • Museum History
  • Tickets
  • Give
  • Shop

Triodopsis tridentata

Image Usage Information

  • Jonathan (JC) Carpenter
  • CC BY-NC 4.0 DEED
  • Additional information about this specimen

Family: Polygyridae

Common name: Northern Threetooth

Discovery: Say, 1816

Identification

Width: 12-14.5 mm
Height: 6.5-8.0 mm
Whorls: 5+

The Northern Threetooth is the quintessential threetooth, having a shell with three denticles or “teeth” of calcium carbonate surrounding the reflected aperture. The basal and palatal teeth are small and in the plane of the lip, and the parietal tooth, on the final whorl of the shell, is discrete. The parietal tooth, “points” at or below the outer, palatal, tooth. The shell is covered with fine ridges and has an open umbilicus.

Ecology

Widespread in hardwood or mixed forest, the Northern Threetooth is typically found scattered through the leaf litter in low numbers. Aggregations may occur around and underneath logs or in damp spots. It may also be found along roadsides, in meadows, and even on abandoned terrain in urban areas (Hubricht, 1985).

Taxonomy

Synonyms for T. tridentata include: Helix tridentata, Polygyra tridentata, and Triodopsis lunula.

Distribution

Triodopsis tridentata is the most widespread threetooth of the East, ranging from the southern Appalachian Mountains, west to Michigan and southern Canada, and east into Vermont. In Virginia it is found in the western and northwestern counties

Conservation

NatureServe Global Rank: G5
NatureServe State Rank: S4S5

sidebar

About

  • Mission & Commitments
  • Directors Team
  • Museum History

Get Involved

  • Volunteer
  • Membership
  • Carnegie Discoverers
  • Donate
  • Employment
  • Events

Bring a Group

  • Groups of 10 or More
  • Birthday Parties at the Museum
  • Field Trips

Powdermill

  • Powdermill Nature Reserve
  • Powdermill Field Trips
  • Powdermill Staff
  • Research at Powdermill

More Information

  • Image Permission Requests
  • Science Stories
  • Accessibility
  • Shopping Cart
  • Contact
  • Visitor Policies
One of the Four Carnegie Museums | © Carnegie Institute | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Accessibility
Rad works here logo