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Pomacea haustrum

Pomacea haustrum
Pomacea haustrum 000p.jpg
Apertural view of a shell of Pomacea haustrum
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
(unranked): clade Caenogastropoda

informal group Architaenioglossa

Superfamily: Ampullarioidea
Family: Ampullariidae
Genus: Pomacea
Subgenus: Pomacea
Species: P. haustrum
Binomial name
Pomacea haustrum
(Reeve, 1856)

informal group Architaenioglossa

Pomacea haustrum, common name the titan applesnail, is a species of large freshwater snail with an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Ampullariidae, the applesnails.

Pomacea haustrum was originally described under the name Ampullaria haustrum by Lovell Augustus Reeve in his book Conchologia Iconica, in 1856.

In Reeve's original text, (the type description) reads as follows:

Species 23. (Mus. Cuming.)

AMPULLARIA HAUSTRUM. Amp. testâ compressè ovatâ, ventricosissimâ, vix umbilicatâ, spirâ parvâ, subimmersâ, anfractibus ad suturam impressè canaliculatis, deinde convexis; sordidè olivaceâ, striatâ et malleatâ, fasciis angustis pallidè virescentibus cingulatâ; aperturâ pyrifomi-oblongâ, peramplâ; fauce livida- purpureâ.

THE SCOOP AMPULLARIA. Shell compressly ovate, very ventricose, scarcely umbilicated, spire small, rather immersed, whorls impressly channelled at the suture, then convex; dull olive, striated and malleated, encircled with narrow faint green bands; aperture pyriformly oblong, very large; livid purple in the interior.

Hab. River Maranon, Brazil.

This fine species belongs to the same type as A. insularum, D ́Orbigny, from La Plata. Its chief points of difference consist in being less distinctly umbilicated, and in having a much larger and more expanded aperture.

It is difficult to identify even the general region of the type locality for this species. The type locality was given as the Río Marañón, Brazil, but this river is in Peru, joining with the Rio Ucayali above Iquitos to become the Rio Solimões, which in turn joins with the Rio Negro to become the Amazon River of Brazil. Some of the first Europeans to explore the region in the sixteenth century, however, referred to the Amazon River as El Río Marañón, and some nineteenth century maps refer to the entire Amazon as the Marañón. It is likely that the Río Marañón of one collector was not the same as the Río Marañón of another.


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