| Melanoides | |
|---|---|
![]()  | |
| live Melanoides tuberculata | |
![]()  | |
| Apertural view of two shells of Melanoides tuberculata | |
| Scientific classification  | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota | 
| Kingdom: | Animalia | 
| Phylum: | Mollusca | 
| Class: | Gastropoda | 
| Subclass: | Caenogastropoda | 
| Superfamily: | Cerithioidea | 
| Family: | Thiaridae | 
| Subfamily: | Thiarinae | 
| Genus: | Melanoides Olivier, 1804[1]  | 
| Type species | |
| Melanoides fasciolata Olivier, 1804 | |
| Diversity[2] | |
| about 30 species (in Africa) | |
| Synonyms[3] | |
  | |
Melanoides is a genus of freshwater snail with an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the subfamily Thiarinae of the family Thiaridae.[3]
Species
Species within the genus Melanoides include:
- Melanoides admirabilis (Smith, 1880)[2]
 - Melanoides agglutinans (Bequaert & Clench, 1941)[2]
 - Melanoides angolensis Mandahl-Barth, 1974[2]
 - Melanoides anomala (Dautzenberg & Germain, 1914)[2]
 - † Melanoides apirospira (Fontannes, 1884)
 - † Melanoides apscheronica (Andrusov, 1923)
 - † Melanoides aspera Youluo, 1978
 - † Melanoides aspericostata Y.-T. Li, 1987
 - Melanoides bavayi (Dautzenberg & Germain, 1914)[2]
 - † Melanoides castrepiscopalensis (Almera, 1894)
 - † Melanoides catalaunica (Almera & Bofill y Poch, 1895)
 - † Melanoides conica Macaleț, 2002
 - Melanoides crawshayi (Smith, 1893)[2]
 - † Melanoides cretaceus Yen, 1966
 - † Melanoides curvicosta (Deshayes in Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire et al., 1832)
 - Melanoides depravata (Dupuis & Putzeys, 1900)[2]
 - † Melanoides devestita Stache, 1889
 - † Melanoides diestopleura (Fontannes, 1884)
 - Melanoides dupuisi (Spence, 1923)[2]
 - Melanoides elisabethkernae Thach & F. Huber, 2021
 - Melanoides enomotoi Pilsbry, 1924
 - † Melanoides ettingshauseni (Dainelli, 1901)
 - Melanoides fasciata (J. Sowerby, 1819)
 - † Melanoides falcicostata (Hofmann, 1870)
 - Melanoides fasciolata Olivier, 1804: synonym of Melanoides tuberculata (O. F. Müller, 1774)
 - † Melanoides fettkei (Weaver, 1912)
 - † Melanoides floristriata Youluo, 1978
 - † Melanoides florivaricosa Youluo, 1978
 - † Melanoides furuhjelmi (C. Mayer, 1869)
 - † Melanoides gilletae Rey, 1974
 - † Melanoides glypta Youluo, 1978
 - † Melanoides heberti (Hermite, 1879) (temporary name, junior primary homonym of M. heberti Hantken, 1878; no replacement name or synonym available)
 - Melanoides hoekzemai van Benthem Jutting, 1963
 - † Melanoides jeanteti Rey, 1967
 - Melanoides jugicostis (Hanley & Theobald, 1876)[4]
 - † Melanoides juliani (Roman, 1912)
 - †Melanoides kainarensis Starobogatov & Izzatullaev, 1980
 - Melanoides kisangani Pilsbry & Bequaert, 1927[2]
 - Melanoides kinshassaensis (Dupuis & Putzeys, 1900)[2]
 - Melanoides lamberti (Crosse, 1869)
 - Melanoides langi Pilsbry & Bequaert, 1927[2]
 - Melanoides laxa (Mousson, 1869)
 - Melanoides liebrechtsi (Dautzenberg, 1901)[2]
 - † Melanoides lusitanica (Roman, 1907)
 - † Melanoides macra Y.-T. Li, 1987
 - Melanoides magnifica (Bourguignat, 1889)[2]
 - Melanoides manguensis (Thiele, 1928)[2]
 - † Melanoides martinsoni Zharnyl'skaya, 1965
 - Melanoides mweruensis (Smith, 1893)[2]
 - Melanoides nodicincta (Dohrn, 1865)[2]
 - Melanoides nsendweensis (Dupuis & Putzeys, 1900)[2]
 - Melanoides nyangweensis (Dupuis & Putzeys, 1900)[2]
 - Melanoides nyassana (Smith, 1877)[2]
 - † Melanoides otatumei Suzuki, 1944
 - † Melanoides pachecoi (Vidal, 1917)
 - † Melanoides pamirica Lindholm, 1930
 - † Melanoides pectinicostata Youluo, 1978
 - † Melanoides peregrina (Mousson, 1869)
 - Melanoides pergracilis (Martens, 1897)[2]
 - Melanoides polymorpha (Smith, 1877)[2]
 - † Melanoides procurvirostra Kókay, 2006
 - Melanoides psorica (Morelet, 1864)[2]
 - Melanoides pupiformis (Smith, 1877)[2]
 - Melanoides recticosta (Martens, 1882)[2]
 - † Melanoides rwebishengoensis Van Damme & Pickford, 2003
 - † Melanoides sepulchralis (Fontannes, 1884)
 - Melanoides shahdaraensis Starobogatov & Izzatullaev, 1980
 - † Melanoides solitaria Stache, 1889
 - † Melanoides sphecodes (Fontannes, 1884)
 - † Melanoides striata Y.-T. Li, 1987
 - Melanoides swinhoei A. Adams, 1870
 - † Melanoides tourainei Rey, 1974
 - † Melanoides tournoueri (Fuchs, 1877)
 - Melanoides truncatelliformis (Bourguignat, 1885)[5]
 - Melanoides tuberculata (O. F. Müller, 1774) - Red-rimmed melania
 - † Melanoides tudorae Stache, 1889
 - † Melanoides tuozhuangensis Youluo, 1978
 - Melanoides turriculus (I. Lea, 1850) - fawn melania[6]
 - Melanoides turritispira (Smith, 1877)[2]
 - † Melanoides umbraculiformis Youluo, 1978
 - † Melanoides vandenbosschei Van Damme & Pickford, 2003
 - † Melanoides verniersi Van Damme & Pickford, 2003
 - Melanoides victoriae (Dohrn, 1865)[2]
 - † Melanoides vidali (Cossmann, 1898)
 - Melanoides voltae (Thiele, 1928)[2]
 - Melanoides wagenia Pilsbry & Bequaert, 1927[2]
 - † Melanoides winkleri (Mayer, 1861)
 - † Melanoides wollebeni Perrilliat & Vega in Perrilliat et al., 2008
 - † Melanoides yolandae Perrilliat & Vega in Perrilliat et al., 2008
 
- Species brought into synonymy
 
- Melanoides abchasica (Seninski, 1905): synonym of † Tinnyea abchasica (Seninski, 1905)
 - Melanoides conicus Macaleț, 2002: synonym of † Melanoides conica Macaleț, 2002
 - Melanoides riqueti (Grateloup, 1840): synonym of Sermyla riqueti (Grateloup, 1840)
 
References
- ↑ Olivier (1804). Voy. Othoman. 3: 69.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 Brown D. S. (1994). Freshwater Snails of Africa and their Medical Importance. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 0-7484-0026-5.
 - 1 2 Bouchet, P. (2014). Melanoides Olivier, 1804. Accessed through: World Register of Marine Species at http://www.marinespecies.org/aphia.php?p=taxdetails&id=224571 on 2014-11-20
 - ↑ "Melanoides jugicostis (Hanley & Theobald, 1876)". www.gbif.org. Retrieved 15 October 2021.
 - ↑ Kaunda E., Magombo Z., Kahwa D., Mailosa A., Ngereza C. & Lange C. N. (2004). Melanoides truncatelliformis. 2006 IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. Downloaded on 7 August 2007.
 - ↑ "Melanoides". Integrated Taxonomic Information System. accessed 13 May 2011.
 
External links
- Olivier, G.A. (1804). Voyage dans l'Empire Othoman, l'Égypte et la Perse, fair par ordre du Gouvernement, pendant les six premières années de la République. Tome second, ii pp. + 466 pp. + Errata (1 pp.); Atlas, 2d livraison: vii pp., pl. 18-32. Paris (H. Agasse)
 - Brot, A. (1874-1879). Die Melaniaceen (Melanidae) in Abbildungen der Natur mit Beschreibungen. In: Systematisches Conchylien-Cabinet von Martini und Chemnitz. Ersten Bandes, vierundzwanzigste Abtheilung. (1) 24 (229): 1-32, pls. 1-6 (1874); (1) 24 (235): 33-80, pls. 7-12 (1875); (1) 24 (244): 81-128, pls. 13-18 (1875); (1) 24 (249): 129-192, pls. 19-24 (1876); (1) 24 (259): 193-272, pls. 25-30 (1877); (1) 24 (264): 273-352, pls. 31-36 (1877); (1) 24 (271): 353-400, pls. 37-42 (1878); (1) 24 (280): 401-456, pls. 43-48 (1879); (1) 24 (283): 457-488, pl. 49 (1879). Nürnberg (Bauer & Raspe).
 - Brot, A. (1870). Catalogue of the recent species of the family Melanidae American Journal of Conchology. 6: 271-325,
 - Bourguignat, J.-R. (1889). Mélanidées du lac Nyassa suivies d'un aperçu comparatif sur la faune malacologique de ce lac avec celle du grand lac Tanganika. Bulletins de la Société malacologique de France. 6: 1-66, pl. 1-2. (± December) Paris
 - Roman F. (1912 ("1910")). Faune saumâtre du Sannoisien du Gard. Bulletin de la Société Géologique de France. ser. 4, 10: 927-955, pls 22-24
 - Glaubrecht M., Brinkmann N. & Pöppe J. (2009). Diversity and disparity ‘down under': Systematics, biogeography and reproductive modes of the ‘marsupial' freshwater Thiaridae (Caenogastropoda, Cerithioidea) in Australia. Zoosystematics and Evolution. 85(2): 199-275.
 - Annandale, T. N. & Prashad, B. (1919). The Mollusca of the inland waters of Baluchistan and of Seistan, with a note on the liver-fluke of sheep in Seistan, by S. W. Kemp. Records of the Indian Museum. 18: 17-63
 
 Media related to Melanoides at Wikimedia Commons
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.

