Cyclophoridae
Temporal range:
Family Cyclophoridae. A Pterocyclos tenuilabiatus; B Pterocyclos amabilis C Leptopoma pellucidum; D Platyraphe bongaoensis; Broken aperture E Japonia trilirata/kinabaluensis species complex; F Japonia balabacensis
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Caenogastropoda
Order: Architaenioglossa
Superfamily: Cyclophoroidea
Family: Cyclophoridae
Gray, 1847
Subfamilies

Alycaeinae
Cyclophorinae
Spirostomatinae

Synonyms

Alycaeidae Blanford, 1864

Cyclophoridae is a taxonomic family of small to large tropical land snails with an operculum, terrestrial gastropod mollusks in the order Architaenioglossa belonging to the subclass Caenogastropoda (according to the taxonomy of the Gastropoda by Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005).

This diverse family with many species is now limited to the representatives in the tropics and subtropics of the Old and New World.

Their fossil history dates back through the Early Tertiary[1] to the Cenomanian age of the Cretaceous.[2]

Description

The dextral shells are mostly of small and rarely medium size. The form of the shell varies from discoidal to turbinate. The round aperture is often modified, sometimes with an incision or a constriction. The last whorl can sometimes be disconnected and then extends strongly from the winding plane. The operculum is generally circular, which can be retracted deeply into the shell. Its form is multispiral and can be calcified or lacking calcareous overlay. The outer layer of the operculum can contain accessory deposits.

The head of the soft body ends in a short proboscis. The tentacles are round in cross-section, relatively long and taper to the end. The eyes are located at the base of the antenna on flat papillae. The longitudinal muscular foot is not divided. The mantle cavity acts as a lung cavity. The taenioglossan radula has seven elements per transverse row. The central row of the radula contains usually five, rarely three or seven teeth. The animals are dioecious.

Taxonomy and systematics

Archaeocyclotus plicatula in Burmese amber

This family consists of the following subfamilies according to the taxonomy of the Gastropoda by Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005, which adapted the tribes of Cyclophorinae from the system used by Wenz (1938).[3] Thirty five genera containing approximately 810 species have been recognized as in 2008.[4]

Some notable genera are also listed here:

  • Subfamily Cyclophoridae incertae sedis (taxon inquirendum)
    • Acroptychia Crosse & P. Fischer, 1877
    • Anosycolus Fischer-Piette, C.P. Blanc, F. Blanc & Salvat, 1993
    • Archaeocyclotus Asato & Hirano in Hirano et al., 2019
    • Boucardicus Fischer-Piette & Bedoucha, 1965
    • Dominamaria Iredale, 1941
    • Ettemona Iredale, 1941
    • Hainesia L. Pfeiffer, 1856
    • Hirsuticyclus Neubauer, Xing & Jochum, 2019
    • Madgeaconcha Griffiths & Florens, 2004
    • Naggsiaconcha Griffiths & Florens, 2004
    • Nobuea Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1943
    • Palaeocyclophorus Wenz, 1923
    • Tropidogyra Wenz, 1923
    • Ventriculus Wenz in Fischer & Wenz, 1914
    • Cyclophorus incertae sedis (temporary name)
  • Subfamily Alycaeinae Blanford, 1864: raised to the rank of family Alycaeidae in 2020 [5]
  • Subfamily Cyclophorinae Gray, 1847
    • Tribe Caspicyclotini Wenz, 1938
    • Tribe Cyathopomatini Kobelt & Möllendorff, 1897
      • Cyathopoma Blanford & Blanford, 1861
      • Jerdonia Blanford & Blanford, 1861
      • Mychopoma Blanford, 1869
      • Pseudojerdonia Kobelt, 1902
    • Tribe Cyclophorini Gray, 1847
    • Tribe Cyclotini Pfeiffer, 1853
    • Tribe Pterocyclini Kobelt & Möllendorff, 1897
    • Incertae sedis
  • Incertae sedis
    • Incertae sedis
      • Eotrichophorus Bullis, Herhold, Czekanski-Moir, Grimaldi & Rundell, 2020
      • Pseudarinia Yen, 1952
  • Subfamily Spirostomatinae Tielecke, 1940
    • Incertae sedis
      • Spirostoma Heude, 1885

References

  1. Gordon MS, Olson EC (1995) Invasions of the Land: The Transitions of Organisms from Aquatic to Terrestrial Life. Columbia University Press, New York, 312 pp
  2. Hirano, T.; Asato, K.; Yamamoto, S.; Takahashi, Y.; Chiba, S. (2019). "Cretaceous amber fossils highlight the evolutionary history and morphological conservatism of land snails". Scientific Reports. 9 (1): Article number 15886. Bibcode:2019NatSR...915886H. doi:10.1038/s41598-019-51840-3. PMC 6828811. PMID 31685840.
  3. (in German) Wenz W. (1938-1944) Teil 1: Allgemeiner Teil und Prosobranchia. In: Schindewolf O. H. (ed.) Handbuch der Paläozoologie, Band 6, Gastropoda, Verlag Gebrüder Bornträger, Berlin, xii + 1639 pp.
  4. Lee YC, Lue KY, Wu WL (2008) Molecular evidence for a polyphyletic genus Japonia (Architaenioglossa: Cyclophoridae) and with the description of a new genus and two new species. Zootaxa 1792: 22-38.
  5. Páll-Gergely, B., Sajan, S., Tripathy, B., Meng, K., Asami, T. & Ablett, J.D. (2020). Genus-level revision of the Alycaeidae (Gastropoda: Cyclophoroidea), with an annotated species catalog. ZooKeys. 981: 1–220

Sources

  • Kobelt, W. (1909). Cyclophoridae. Berlin: Verlag von R. Friedländer und Sohn. The standard reference based on shell morphology.
  • Nantarat, N., Sutcharit, C., Tongkerd, P., Ablett, J., Naggs, F. & Panha, S. (2014). An annotated catalogue of type specimes of the land snail genus Cyclophorus Monfort, 1810 (Caenogastropoda, Cyclophoridae) in the Natural History Museum, London. ZooKeys, 411, 1–56.
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