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Larry Watrous |
Carychium
exile
I. Lea, 1842
ice thorn
Family
Carychiidae
Order Basommatophora
The ice
thorn is a tiny animal that lives on the surfaces of rotting
leaves in damp leaf litter. It has an elongated, delicate,
whitish and translucent shell approximately 1.75mm long. A
single lamella spirals around the internal spire and appears
at the aperture as a single small tooth.
Most of
the Keystone State's land snails are Stylommatophorans, having
eyes at the tips of their upper tentacles, but the ice thorn
is a Basommatophoran (as are many freshwater snails), with
eyespots at the base of its tentacles, and with a different
arrangement of kidney and lungs as well.
The ice
thorn is widespread in the Eastern United States, including
Pennsylvania, but somewhat patchy in distribution, perhaps
due to its preference for richer sites. Across its range this
animal is found in a wide variety of habitats including in
the Great Lakes Region (Nekola,
1999) and it was found at cave entrances in the Midwest
and southeast (e.g. Hobbs,
1994). In Tennessee the ice thorn was found to be positively
correlated with soil moisture and soil pH (Coney
et al., 1982).
The ice
thorn is distinguished from its close relative, the obese
thorn (Carychium exiguum), by its narrower shell, stronger
sculpture of close striations, and differences in the internal
lamella. Many authors previously called large examples of
Carychium exile as Carychium exile canadensis,
but this subspecies distinction was found to be invalid in
the Great Lakes region by Nekola
and Barthel (2002).
Ken Hotopp,
1/2/06
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