Mollusca : Gastropoda : incertae sedis : Planorbidae | Snails and slugs |
Ferrissia californica |
Description: A tiny freshwater limpet with ovoid, flattened shell which is easily mistaken for a juvenile Acroloxus lacustris. Unlike Acroloxus, however, the apex of the shell is evenly rounded in profile and lacks the distinctive sharply pointed apex of that species. The apex of Ferrissia is blunt and arches backwards and to the right (not to the left as in Acroloxus). Found in aquaria and introduced widely in Europe, in ponds, lakes and larger rivers. 3-4 mm (often smaller).
World Distribution: Native to northern North America, but present in many areas of Europe south to the Danube and the Mediterranean. It probably occurs in other parts of the Palaearctic as well, as a cryptic invader.
Irish Distribution: A common inhabitant of tropical and coldwater aquaria which is almost certainly how it has gained entrance to Irish fresh waters. A single site is currently known: Black Lough, Corkeenagh, Co. Roscommon where it was found on 30 October 2006. There are no further reports.
Ecology:
Key Identification Features:
Taxonomy:
Red list status:
Distribution Map from NBN: Ferrissia californica at National Biodiversity Network mapping facility, data for UK.
iNaturalist: Ferrissia californica at iNaturalist World Species Observations database.
GBIF data for Ferrissia californica | Classification: Gastropoda, incertae sedis, Planorbidae, Ferrissia
Thumbnails for genus Ferrissia
Anderson, R., 2024. Ferrissia californica. (Rowell, 1863). [In] MolluscIreland. https://www2.habitas.org.uk/molluscireland/species.php?item=84. Accessed on 2024-12-26. |