• Source: Cerithioidea
    • The Cerithioidea is a superfamily of marine, brackish water and freshwater gastropod containing more than 200 genera. The Cerithioidea are included unassigned in the subclass Caenogastropoda. The original name of this superfamily was Cerithiacea, in keeping with common superfamily endings at the time.


      Ecology


      Cerithioidea is a very diverse superfamily. Its species can be found worldwide mainly in tropic and subtropic seas on rocky intertidal shores, seagrass beds and algal fronds, but also in estuarine and freshwater habitats. The freshwater species are found on all continents, except Antarctica. They are dominant members of mangrove forests, estuarine mudflats, fast-flowing rivers and placid lakes.


      Fossil record


      Their fossil record of this superfamily can be traced back as far as the early Triassic but they began radiating mainly during the Cretaceous.


      Taxonomy


      The Cerithioidea are presumed to be monophyletic (one lineage). However the phylogenetic relationships between its families are still under investigation because mitochondrial recombinant DNA sequences failed to resolve these questions.


      = 2005 taxonomy

      =
      According to the Taxonomy of the Gastropoda (Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005), the following families are included in Cerithioidea:

      Amphimelaniidae P. Fischer & Crosse, 1891
      Batillariidae Thiele, 1929 - monophyletic
      † Brachytrematidae Cossmann, 1906
      † Cassiopidae Beurlen, 1967
      Cerithiidae Fleming, 1822 - monophyletic
      Dialidae Kay, 1979
      Diastomatidae Cossman, 1894
      † Eustomatidae Cossmann, 1906
      † Ladinulidae Bandel, 1992
      † Lanascalidae Bandel, 1992
      Litiopidae Gray, 1847
      † Maoraxidae Bandel, Gründel, Maxwell, 2000
      Melanopsidae H. Adams & A. Adams, 1854 - freshwater snails, polyphyletic
      Modulidae P. Fischer, 1884
      Pachychilidae P. Fischer & Crosse, 1892
      Paludomidae Stoliczka, 1868
      Pelycidiidae Ponder & Hall, 1983
      Pickworthiidae Iredale, 1917
      Planaxidae Gray, 1850
      Pleuroceridae P. Fischer, 1885 (1863) - freshwater snails, polyphyletic
      † Popenellidae Bandel, 1992
      Potamididae H. Adams & A. Adams, 1854 - monophyletic
      † Procerithiidae Cossmann, 1906 - If the genus Argyropeza is placed in the Procerithiidae, then this family is no longer exclusively a family of fossils.
      † Propupaspiridae Nützel, Pan & Erwin, 2002
      † Prostyliferidae Bandel, 1992
      Scaliolidae Jousseaume, 1912 - monophyletic
      Semisulcospiridae J. P. E. Morrison, 1952
      Siliquariidae Anton, 1838
      Thiaridae Gill, 1871 (1823) - freshwater snails, polyphyletic
      Turritellidae Lovén, 1847 - monophyletic
      Zemelanopsidae Neiber & Glaubrecht, 2019
      (Extinct taxa indicated by a dagger, †.)
      It is possible that a further detailed examination may show that the polyphyletic families Melanopsidae and Pleuroceridae are one family. There is also a close phylogenetic relationship between the families Modulidae and Potamididae and between the families Cerithiidae and Litiopidae.


      = 2006 taxonomy

      =
      Bandel (2006) made numerous changes in Cerithioidea. He classified superfamily Cerithioidea in the clade Cerithimorpha.
      Changes include:
      superfamily Cerithioidea

      family Bittiidae Cossmann, 1906 - consider Bittiidae in its own family level. It was as subfamily Bittiinae within Cerithiidae by Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005.
      family † Maturifusidae - moved to Cerithioidea from Hypsogastropoda
      family † Canterburyellidae - moved to Cerithioidea from unallocated Sorbeoconcha
      family † Prisciphoridae - moved to Cerithioidea from unallocated Sorbeoconcha
      family † Zardinellopsidae Bandel, 2006 - new family
      family Pachymelaniidae - considered as valid family. It was as synonym of Thiaridae.
      some Pyrguliferidae members (a synonym) are in Paludomidae and some are in Paramelaniidae (instead of Thiaridae)
      family Paramelaniidae at family level (instead of a synonym of Paludomidae)
      and some moves to other taxa


      = 2009 taxonomy

      =
      Subfamily Semisulcospirinae within Pleuroceridae was elevated to family level under the name Semisulcospiridae by Strong & Köhler (2009).


      = 2017 Taxonomy

      =
      In the updated taxonomy by Bouchet et al. (2017)are listed below:

      Batillariidae Thiele, 1929
      † Brachytrematidae Cossmann, 1906
      Cerithiidae Fleming, 1822
      Dialidae Kay, 1979
      Diastomatidae Cossmann, 1894
      † Eustomatidae Cossmann, 1906
      Hemisinidae P. Fischer & Crosse, 1891
      † Ladinulidae Bandel, 1992
      Litiopidae Gray, 1847
      † Maoraxidae Bandel, Gründel & Maxwell, 2000
      Melanopsidae H. Adams & A. Adams, 1854
      † Metacerithiidae Cossmann, 1906
      Modulidae P. Fischer, 1884
      Pachychilidae P. Fischer & Crosse, 1892
      Paludomidae Stoliczka, 1868
      Pelycidiidae Ponder & Hall, 1983
      Pickworthiidae Iredale, 1917
      Planaxidae Gray, 1850
      Pleuroceridae P. Fischer, 1885 (1863)
      † Popenellidae Bandel, 1992
      Potamididae H. Adams & A. Adams, 1854
      † Procerithiidae Cossmann, 1906
      † Propupaspiridae Nützel, Pan & Erwin, 2002
      † Prostyliferidae Bandel, 1992
      Scaliolidae Jousseaume, 1912
      Semisulcospiridae Morrison, 1952
      Siliquariidae Anton, 1838
      Thiaridae Gill, 1871 (1823)
      Turritellidae Lovén, 1847
      Unassigned:

      Microstilifer Warén, 1980
      The following two extinct families were moved out:

      Lanascalidae Bandel, 1992 †
      Metacerithiidae Cossmann, 1906 †


      References




      External links


      Halder K. & Sinha P. (2014). "Some Eocene Cerithioids (Gastropoda, Mollusca) from Kutch, Western India, and Their Bearing on Palaeobiogeography of the Indian Subcontinent". Paleontology Journal 2014: Article ID 673469, 11 pp. doi:10.1155/2014/673469.
      Lydeard C.; Holznagel W. E.; Glaubrecht M. & Ponder W. F. (2002). "Molecular Phylogeny of Circum-Global, Diverse Gastropod Superfamily (Cerithioidea: Mollusca : Caenogastropoda) - Pushing the Deepest Phylogenetic Limits of Mitochondrial LSU rDNA Sequences". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 22 (3): 399–406. doi:10.1006/mpev.2001.1072. PMID 11884164.

    Kata Kunci Pencarian: