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Physella acuta is a species of small, left-handed or sinistral, air-breathing freshwater snail, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Physidae. Common names include European physa , tadpole snail , bladder snail , and acute bladder snail .
Rivicola Fitzinger, 1833 (Invalid: junior objective synonym of Physa, with the same type species) Physa is a genus of small, left-handed or sinistral, air-breathing freshwater snails , aquatic pulmonate gastropod molluscs in the subfamily Physinae of the family Physidae .
The observations are restricted to Physa fontinalis, an indigenous species to areas with indigenous predatory leeches, and Haitia acuta, introduced in Germany and the Netherlands. When Physa contacts another snail, either Physa or some other kind, the reaction is a rapid twisting of the shell back and forth to dislodge the other.
Physella is a genus of small, left-handed or sinistral, air-breathing freshwater snails, aquatic pulmonate gastropod mollusks in the family Physidae. These snails eat algae , diatoms and other detritus .
Physella acuta; Physella ancillaria Say 1825 - Pumpkin Physa; Physella bermudezi Aguayo 1935 - Lowdome Physa; Physella bottimeri Clench 1924 - Comanche Physa; Physella boucardi Cross and Fischer 1881 - Desert Physa; Physella columbiana Hemphill 1890 - Rotund Physa; Physella conoidea Fischer and Crosse 1886 - Texas Physa; Physella cooperi Tryon ...
Species available vary in different parts of the world. In the United States, commonly available species include ramshorn snails such as Planorbella duryi, bladder snails such as Physella acuta, apple snails such as Pomacea bridgesii, the high-spired thiarid Malaysian trumpet snail, Melanoides tuberculata, and several Neritina species.
Basommatophora was a term that was previously used as a taxonomic informal group, a group of snails within the informal group Pulmonata, the air-breathing slugs and snails.. According to the taxonomy of the Gastropoda (Bouchet & Rocroi, 2005), whenever monophyly has not been tested, or where a traditional taxon of gastropods has now been discovered to be paraphyletic or polyphyletic, the term ...
Hygrophila is a taxonomic superorder of air-breathing freshwater snails, aquatic pulmonate gastropod mollusks within the clade Panpulmonata. [2] [1]The families in this clade are basically air-breathing freshwater snails including freshwater limpets.