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Pyrgulopsis nevadensis

Corded purg
Pyrgulopsis nevadensis shell 2.jpg
Drawing of lateral view of the shell of Pyrgulopsis nevadensis.
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
(unranked): clade Caenogastropoda

clade Hypsogastropoda
clade Littorinimorpha

Superfamily: Rissooidea
Family: Hydrobiidae
Subfamily: Nymphophilinae
Genus: Pyrgulopsis
Species: P. nevadensis
Binomial name
Pyrgulopsis nevadensis
(Stearns, 1883)
Synonyms

Pyrgula nevadensis Sterns, 1883


clade Hypsogastropoda
clade Littorinimorpha

Pyrgula nevadensis Sterns, 1883

The corded purg, scientific name Pyrgulopsis nevadensis, is an extinct species of freshwater snail with a gill and an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Hydrobiidae.

Pyrgulopsis nevadensis is the type species of the genus Pyrgulopsis.

The shell is small, somewhat elongated, variable, turreted and imperforate. The shell has 4½-5½ whorls, that are strongly unicarinate on periphery, otherwise smooth. The epidermis is shining, light straw in color or whitish. The suture is white. The suture is deeply and regularly impressed, made conspicuous by the approximating carina.

There existed also smooth variation. (plate II, figure 6-8.)

The aperture is very oblique, roundly ovate, with an angle on outer edge corresponding to the excavated carina, posteriorly sharply angled, well rounded before. The peritreme is continuous, almost rimate, closely appressed to parietal wall.

The operculum is light corneous, spiral and closely fitting the aperture.

Jaw is thin and membranaceous.

Detailed description of radula was provided by Charles Emerson Beecher in 1886 (page 11-12).


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