Neogastropoda

bgcolor=pink | Neogastropoda
bgcolor=pink |
{| align="center"
: Animalia
: Mollusca
: Gastropoda
: Orthogastropoda
|| Caenogastropoda
: Sorbeoconcha
: Hypsogastropoda
: Neogastropoda }
bgcolor="pink" | Superfamilies
Buccinoidea
Cancellarioidea
Conoidea
Muricoidea
The Neogastropoda used to be an order of prosobranch gastropods in the taxonomy of Thiele (1921). They are now included in the infraorder Neoogastropoda Cox, 1960. A more detailed account about the discussion on the taxonomy of the Gastropoda is given in Gastropoda, Archaeogastropoda and Mesogastropoda.

Description

The Neogastropoda are the modern marine snails. They evolved in a much later stage than the Archaegastropoda and the Mesogastropoda. The first specimens of these prosobranchs are found in layers of the Late Cretaceous, about 70 million years ago. They only have one auricle, one kidney and one monopectinate gill, i.e. the gill filaments develop on only one side of the central axis, . The shell has a welll-developed siphonal canal. The elongated trunk-like siphon is an extensible tube, formed from a fold in the | mantle. It is used to suck water into the mantle cavity. At the base of the siphon is the bipectinate (= branching from a central axis) osphradium, a sensory receptacle and olfactory organ, that is more developed than the one in the Mesogastropoda. The nervous system is very concentrated. Many species have the ganglia in a compact space. The rachiglossate (= rasp-like) radula, a layer of serially arranged teeth within the mouth, have only three denticles (= small teeth) in each transverse row. The Neogastropoda have separate sexes. There are about 16,000 species. Neogastropoda includes many well-known gastropods such as the cones, conchs, mud snails, olive snails, oyster drills,tulip snails, and whelks,. The Neogastropoda all live in the sea, except Clea, a rare freshwater genus. They are mostly predators, some are saprophagous (= scavengers).

Taxonomy

(according to ITIS)
  • Family Buccinidae Rafinesque, 1813
  • Family Cancellariidae Forbes and Hanley, 1853
  • Family Columbellidae Swainson, 1840
  • Family Conidae Rafinesque, 1815
  • Family Coralliophilidae Chenu, 1859
  • Family Costellariidae
  • Family Cystiscidae
  • Family Drilliidae
  • Family Fasciolariidae Gray, 1853
  • Family Harpidae
  • Family Marginellidae Fleming, 1828
  • Family Melongenidae Gill, 1867
  • Family Mitridae Swainson, 1931
  • Family Muricidae
  • Family Nassariidae
  • Family Olividae Latreille, 1825
  • Family Pseudolividae Cossmann, 1901
  • Family Pseudomelatomidae
  • Family Strictispiridae
  • Family Terebridae H. and A. Adams, 1854
  • Family Turbinellidae
  • Family Turridae
  • Family Volutidae Rafinesque, 1815
*Family Volutomitridae Gray, 1854

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
juan maldacena
bob hartley
cft
leonard susskind
chechen war
hms broadsword
little conemaugh river
windshare
syrian thistle
mike sullivan
porno
sweden and the winter war
mount tyree
democratic women's federation of germany
balance act
spin foam
lindy ruff
stoneycreek river
amlodipine
keyarena
mount jackson (antarctica)
background independence
society for german soviet friendship
bob dornan
died pretty
treaty of westminster (1931)
alexander kluge
brooklyn class cruiser
crown point (oregon)
avantasia
tachyon condensation
interactivity
hanley
user scenario
mark recchi
west hartlepool
warley
augusto csar sandino
telehaptic
higgs mechanism
chauncey billups
mother's day proclamation
charles woodson
mount markham