Family
Polygyridae
Order Stylommatophora
The striped
whitelip is a large snail with a reflected lip and reddish
color bands on a lighter yellowish or pale brownish background.
The shell is rather round, slightly depressed, with 5 or more
whorls, but varies in size. Pilsbry
(1940) reports sizes from 21mm diameter and 14mm
height to 30mm diameter and 18.5mm height. It generally has
no denticles, or “teeth,” in its aperture, though
Pilsbry states there is rarely a low parietal tooth. Its umbilicus
or “belly button” is closed as an adult, covered
by a callus, but the umbilicus is open in immature animals.
Juveniles also lack the reflected lip, but the color bands
and shell shape are diagnostic. The animal is gray.
A denizen
of large wetlands and river floodplains, the striped whitelip
can be found in semi-open sedge and shrub swamp habitat, wet
meadows and marshes. In summer I have found it crawling low
on leaf litter, moss and saturated soil, and climbing herbaceous
plants or lower shrub branches. It is often on skunk cabbage,
which it may eat. It appears to use logs, rocks, moss hummocks
and hillocks that develop around the foot of wetland shrubs
for cover, to escape high water, and to overwinter.
The striped
whitelip is quite uncommon East of the Ohio River. In Pennsylvania
it is known from only scattered records on the main stem or
lower tributaries of the Monongahela River, and from wetlands
in Beaver County (Brooks, 1931; Hubricht, 1985).
Ken Hotopp,
9/14/05