Redescription ofViviparus sphaeridius Bourguignat 1880 with an identification key of the EuropeanViviparus species (Gastropoda: Viviparidae)
Author
Glöer, Peter
Biodiversity Research Laboratory, Schulstrasse 3, D- 25491 Hetlingen, Germany. E-mail: gloeer @ malaco. de
Author
Georgiev, Dilian
Department of Ecology and Environmental Conservation, University of Plovdiv, Tzar Assen Str. 24, BG- 4000 Plovdiv, Bulgaria. E-mail: diliangeorgiev @ abv. bg
text
Ecologica Montenegrina
2014
2014-08-21
1
2
96
102
journal article
2336-9744
Viviparus sphaeridius
Bourguignat, 1880
(
Figs. 2-5
)
Materials examined:
3 adult
females from Danube near vill. Marten
14.05.2009
Georgiev leg.; 7 empty shells from Brashlen near Marten.
June 2008
Georgiev leg.
Redescription:
Shell oval conical, thick and yellowish brown (
Fig 3B
) with three brownish bands (
Fig. 3E
), not visible in the adults. The 5-6 whorls are slightly convex with a flat suture and an acute apex (
Fig. 3D, 3E
). The body whorl is very bulbous, the umbilicus is scarcely visible. The first two whorls are very small in height, the others are regularly fast growing. Spire height about a fifth of shell height. Shell height
24-28 mm
, width
18-20 mm
.
Figure 3
.
Viviparus sphaeridius
.
A
: Syntype: 23.6 mm, MHNG 4861, Romania, Dabube à Giurgewo (photo E. Neubert);
B-C
: adult shells from Marten, Bulgaria (topotypes),
D-E
: embryonic shells from C.
Differentiating features:
V. sphaeridius
belongs to the smaller
Viviparus
spp.
of Europe, together with
V. viparus
and
V. hellenicus
(
Fig. 4
). Independent of the shell height it can be distinguished by the acute apex from
V. viviparus
which has a blunt apex. It differs from
V. hellenicus
in the form of the body whorl, which is canted in this species while the body whorl in
V. sphaeridius
is rounded. From
V. acerosus
, which also occurs in this region it can be distinguished by the first whorls, which are more flattened in
V. sphaeridius
and less convex than in
V. acerosus
. In addition the spire is less higher than in
V. acerosus
.
Associated species:
Theodoxus danubialis
(C. Pfeiffer, 1828)
,
Bithynia danubialis
Glöer & Georgiev 2012
,
Bithynia tentaculata
(Linnaeus, 1758)
,
Lithoglyphus naticoides
(C. Pfeiffer, 1828)
, and
Esperiana daudebartii
(Prevost, 1821)
.
Habitat and ecology:
V. sphaeridius
was collected from the littoral zone of the Danube from sandy bottom with patches of aquatic macrophytes.
Distribution:
Rivers and lakes of the basins of Danube, Dnieper and Dniester rivers (Anistratenko 1998b;
Starobogatov
et al
. 2004
; cited after
Kantor
et al
. 2009
).