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Neotricula aperta

Neotricula aperta
Neotricula aperta shell.png
apertural view of a shell of Neotricula aperta
Neotricula aperta.jpg
Neotricula aperta on a stone
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
(unranked): clade Caenogastropoda

clade Hypsogastropoda
clade Littorinimorpha

Superfamily: Rissooidea
Family: Pomatiopsidae
Subfamily: Triculinae
Tribe: Pachydrobiini
Genus: Neotricula
Species: N. aperta
Binomial name
Neotricula aperta
(Temcharoen, 1971)
Synonyms

Lithoglyphopsis aperta


clade Hypsogastropoda
clade Littorinimorpha

Lithoglyphopsis aperta

Neotricula aperta is a species of freshwater snail, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Pomatiopsidae.

This species serves as a sole intermediate host for the fluke Schistosoma mekongi, that causes Mekong schistosomiasis.

Currently, Neotricula aperta is known from 31 localities in Cambodia, Laos and Thailand, involving nine river systems. The known range of Neotricula aperta is from just south of Kratié in the Mekong river of Cambodia to Kong Lor in Savannakhet of central Laos.

This species occurs:

The type locality is Ban Na on Khong Island, Laos.

A detailed account of the anatomy of Neotricula aperta was given by Davis et al. in 1976.

Three strains of Neotricula aperta have been recognized (called α, β and γ), on the basis of shell size and body pigmentation. Although all three strains are susceptible to Schistosoma mekongi (γ> > β > α), only the γ-strain is epidemiologically significant.

Neotricula aperta is exclusively epilithic or epixylic (on rotting wood).Neotricula aperta is found only in shallow areas (typically 0.5 to 3 m deep) of the Mekong river and some of its tributaries. The snails are restricted to areas where the current is moderate (around 2 × 103 m3s−1), the water is clear and the bed rock forms (almost flat) platforms where agal aufwuchs is extensive. Such conditions exist only during the dry season in the lower Mekong (March to May) and so Neotricula aperta populations persist mostly by recruitment (from eggs laid on stones in the previous year) or re-colonization from other rivers, and transmission of Schistosoma mekongi is seasonal.Population density can reach up to 4734 snails per m².


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Wikipedia

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