The Enigmatic Cavesnail, Fontigens antroecetes (Hubricht, 1940), is a cave adapted hydrobioid snail listed as state endangered in Illinois. It is known from only one cave in Illinois, Stemler Cave, and from several caves in the eastern Ozark ecoregion of Missouri. Little is known about the snail's reproductive habits, embryological development, or growth rates. I attempted to gain basic life history information by breeding Enigmatic Cavesnails under simulated cave conditions in the laboratory. Six adult snails were collected from Stemler Cave and held in aerated containers of cave water with one or two cobbles from the cave stream. Containers of snails were housed in incubators set at the average cave water temperature of 13 °C. The snails ...
A new species of cave snail (Littorinimorpha: Cochliopidae) in the genus Antrorbis is described from...
Observations are made on the biology of several species of cave planarians (mostly of the family Ken...
Current zoological research may benefit in many ways from the study of old collections of shells. Th...
Objective obstacles such as high water levels that prevent access to caves at certain times of the y...
Illinois Endangered Species Protection Board, Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Office of Re...
The Wichita Mountains pillsnail, Euchemotrema wichitorum, was originally described in 1972 from surv...
Discus macclintocki Baker, the Iowa Pleistocene snail, is a federally endangered species found only ...
Data sheet produced by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources is about different times of animals,...
journal articleGeneral interest in the subject of molluscan embryology has continued in part because...
Transplantations of Omphiscola glabra from granite to marl, or vice versa, between farms known for c...
In ten explored limestone caves of the Bohemian Forest foothills, 23 snail species were found. The r...
The rare carnivorous land snail Paryphanta busbyi watti was investigated by following marked snails ...
The Edwards-Trinity Aquifer System of Texas, USA, one of the world’s most ecologically diverse groun...
Partula snails, also known as Polynesian tree snails, were first recorded scientifically from Captai...
in Costa Rica for 16 months. The Iifespan of this snail in captivity was about nine months (N = 22) ...
A new species of cave snail (Littorinimorpha: Cochliopidae) in the genus Antrorbis is described from...
Observations are made on the biology of several species of cave planarians (mostly of the family Ken...
Current zoological research may benefit in many ways from the study of old collections of shells. Th...
Objective obstacles such as high water levels that prevent access to caves at certain times of the y...
Illinois Endangered Species Protection Board, Illinois Department of Natural Resources, Office of Re...
The Wichita Mountains pillsnail, Euchemotrema wichitorum, was originally described in 1972 from surv...
Discus macclintocki Baker, the Iowa Pleistocene snail, is a federally endangered species found only ...
Data sheet produced by the Iowa Department of Natural Resources is about different times of animals,...
journal articleGeneral interest in the subject of molluscan embryology has continued in part because...
Transplantations of Omphiscola glabra from granite to marl, or vice versa, between farms known for c...
In ten explored limestone caves of the Bohemian Forest foothills, 23 snail species were found. The r...
The rare carnivorous land snail Paryphanta busbyi watti was investigated by following marked snails ...
The Edwards-Trinity Aquifer System of Texas, USA, one of the world’s most ecologically diverse groun...
Partula snails, also known as Polynesian tree snails, were first recorded scientifically from Captai...
in Costa Rica for 16 months. The Iifespan of this snail in captivity was about nine months (N = 22) ...
A new species of cave snail (Littorinimorpha: Cochliopidae) in the genus Antrorbis is described from...
Observations are made on the biology of several species of cave planarians (mostly of the family Ken...
Current zoological research may benefit in many ways from the study of old collections of shells. Th...