Cerion (gastropod)
Cerion is a genus of small to medium-sized tropical air-breathing land snails, terrestrial pulmonate gastropods in the family Cerionidae, sometimes known as the peanut snails. The genus is endemic to the Caribbean region.
Cerion Temporal range: | |
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Drawing of a live individual of Cerion chrysalis | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Gastropoda |
Subclass: | Heterobranchia |
Order: | Stylommatophora |
Infraorder: | Helicina |
Superfamily: | Urocoptoidea |
Family: | Cerionidae |
Genus: | Cerion Röding, 1798[2] |
Type species | |
Turbo uva | |
Species | |
See text |
The name Cerion is based on the Greek word kerion, signifying honeycomb, and is given to these shells because the form of the shell resembles that of a beehive; hence they were at one time known as beehive shells.[4]
The fossil range of Cerion is possibly from the Upper Cretaceous of Montana, or the early Miocene of Florida.[1] Records of Cerion in Pleistocene are rare.[1]
Species
Species within the genus Cerion include:
- Cerion acuticostatum Sánchez Roig, 1948[5]
- Cerion aguayoi Torre & Clench, 1932[5]
- Cerion alberti Clench & Aguayo, 1949[5]
- Cerion alleni Torre, 1929[5]
- Cerion anodonta
- Cerion arangoi (Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1896)[5]
- Cerion banesense Clench & Aguayo, 1949[5]
- Cerion barroi Aguayo & Jaume, 1957[5]
- Cerion basistriatum Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1895[5]
- Cerion bioscai Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion blanesi Clench & Aguayo, 1951[5]
- Cerion cabocruzense Pilsbry & Torre, 1943[5]
- Cerion capraia
- Cerion caroli Aguayo & Torre, 1951[5]
- Cerion casablancae Bartsch, 1920
- Cerion catherwoodianum Wurtz, 1950[5]
- Cerion ceiba Clench, 1948[5]
- Cerion chaparra Aguayo & Sánchez Roig, 1953[5]
- Cerion chaplini Wurtz, 1950[5]
- Cerion chrysalis(Ferussac in Beck, 1837)
- Cerion chrysaloides
- Cerion circumscriptum Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion cisneroi Clench & Aguayo, 1951[5]
- Cerion cobarrubia Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion columbiana
- Cerion columbinus Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion coutini Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion crassilabris
- Cerion crassiusculum Torre in Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1899[5]
- Cerion cyclostomum (Küster, 1841)[5]
- Cerion dimidiatum (Pfeiffer, 1847)[5]
- Cerion disforme Clench & Aguayo, 1946[5]
- Cerion dorotheae Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion ebriolum Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion evolva
- Cerion fasciata
- Cerion feltoni Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion floridanum
- Cerion geophilum Clench & Aguayo, 1949[5]
- Cerion glans (Küster, 1844)
- Cerion grilloensis Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion grisea
- Cerion gundlachi (Pfeiffer, 1852)[5]
- Cerion herrerai Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion hessei Clench & Aguayo, 1949[5]
- Cerion humberti Clench & Aguayo, 1949[5]
- Cerion hyperlissum Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1896[5]
- Cerion incanum (A. Binney, 1851)
- Cerion incrassatum (Sowerby, 1876)[5]
- Cerion infandulum Aguayo & Torre, 1951[5]
- Cerion infandum (Shuttleworth in Poey, 1858)[5]
- Cerion iostomum (Pfeiffer, 1854)[5]
- Cerion johnsoni Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1895[5]
- Cerion josephi Clench & Aguayo, 1949[5]
- Cerion kusteri (Pfeiffer, 1854)[5]
- Cerion laureani Clench & Aguayo, 1951[5]
- Cerion longidens Pilsbry, 1902[5]
- Cerion macrodon Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion magister Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1896[5]
- Cerion manatiense Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion marielinum Torre in Pilsbry, 1927[5]
- Cerion maritimum (Pfeiffer, 1839)[5]
- Cerion microdon Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1896[5]
- Cerion microstonum (Pfeiffer, 1854)[5]
- Cerion miramarae Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion multicostum (Küster, 1845)[5]
- Cerion mumia (Bruguière, 1792)[5]
- Cerion mumiola (Pfeiffer, 1839)[5]
- Cerion nanus (Maynard, 1889)[6]
- Cerion nipense Aguayo, 1953[5]
- Cerion obesum
- Cerion orientale Clench & Aguayo, 1951[5]
- Cerion palmeri Sánchez Roig, 1948[5]
- Cerion pandionis Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion paredonis Pilsbry, 1902[5]
- Cerion pastelilloensis Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion paucicostatum Torre, 1929[5]
- Cerion paucisculptum Clench & Aguayo, 1952[5]
- Cerion peracutum Clench & Aguayo, 1951[5]
- Cerion persuasa
- Cerion pilsbryi
- Cerion pinerium Dall, 1895[5]
- Cerion politum (Maynard, 1896)[5]
- Cerion prestoni Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion pretiosus Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion pseudocyclostomum Aguayo & Sánchez Roig, 1953[5]
- Cerion pupilla
- Cerion ramsdeni Torre in Welch, 1934[5]
- Cerion regina
- Cerion regula
- Cerion restricta
- Cerion ricardi Clench & Aguayo, 1951[5]
- Cerion rodrigoi Gould, 1997
- Cerion saccharimeta
- Cerion saetiae Sánchez Roig, 1948[5]
- Cerion sagraianum (Pfeiffer, 1847)[5]
- Cerion sainthilarius Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion sallei
- Cerion salvatori Torre in Pilsbry, 1927[5]
- Cerion sanctacruzense Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion sanctamariae Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion sanzi Blanes in Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1898[5]
- Cerion scalarinum (Gundlach in Pfeiffer, 1860)[5]
- Cerion scopulorum Aguayo & Jaume, 1951[5]
- Cerion sculptum (Poey, 1858)[5]
- Cerion sisal Clench & Aguayo, 1952[5]
- Cerion striatellum
- Cerion stupida
- Cerion tanamensis Sánchez Roig, 1951[5]
- Cerion tenuilabre (Gundlach in Pfeiffer, 1870)[5]
- Cerion torrei Blanes in Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1898[5]
- Cerion tridentatun Pilsbry & Vanatta, 1895[5]
- Cerion uva (Linnaeus, 1758)[7]
- Cerion vaccinum
- Cerion vanattai Clench & Aguayo, 1951[5]
- Cerion venustum (Poey, 1858)[5]
- Cerion viaregis Bartsch, 1920
- Cerion victor Torre, 1929[5]
- Cerion vulneratum (Küster, 1855)[5]
- Cerion watlingense Dall, 1907
- Cerion yumaensis
References
- "Cerion: a web-based resource for Cerion research and identification". accessed 5 April 2011.
- Röding P. F. (1798). Museum Boltenianum sive catalogus cimeliorum e tribus regnis naturæ quæ olim collegerat Joa. Fried Bolten, M. D. p. d. per XL. annos proto physicus Hamburgensis. Pars secunda continens conchylia sive testacea univalvia, bivalvia & multivalvia. pp. [1-3], [1-8], 1-199. Hamburg. page 90.
- "Cerion Röding, 1798". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species.
- Baker F. C. (1903). Shells of land and water; a familiar introduction to the study of the mollusks. Chicago, A.W. Mumford, page 48.
- "Mollusca" Archived July 18, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Diversidad Biológica Cubana, accessed 23 March 2011.
- "Cerion". Smithsonian Institution, accessed 17 May 2016.
- "Cerion uva (Linnaeus, 1758)". WoRMS. World Register of Marine Species.
External links
- Delimitation and phylogenetics of the diverse land-snail family Urocoptidae (gastropoda: Pulmonata) based on 28S rRNA sequence data: a reunion with cerion.
- http://invertebrates.si.edu/Cerion/species_list.cfm
- Yesha Shrestha, Herman H. Wirshing, M. G. Harasewych : The Genus Cerion (Gastropoda: Cerionidae) in the Florida Keys; PLOS|ONE September 17, 2015
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