Filopaludina martensi


Filopaludina martensi is a species of large freshwater snail with a gill and an operculum, an aquatic gastropod mollusk in the family Viviparidae.

Description

The shape of the shell is ovate-conic. The apex is acute and violet-black in colour. The umbilicus of the shell is very narrow. There are fine spiral lines on the shell. The color of the shell is green or dark brown-blackish. The shell has 6-7 convex whorls. Whorls are with upper spiral lines, some are obsolescently sculptured. The last whorl is swollen.
The aperture is oblique, ovately rounded. The aperture is cerulean-white in colour. The upper part of the aperture is not acute. The peristome is straight, thick, blunt, often outwardly blackish.
The width of the shell is up to. The height of the shell is up to. The length of the aperture is up to.
The operculum has the color of horn with golden shining and it is widely ovate. There are concentric lines on the operculum.

Taxonomy

This species was firstly described by Eduard von Martens under the name Paludina cingulata in 1860 based on specimen collected by Henri Mouhot. Georg Ritter von Frauenfeld created a new replacement name Vivipara martensi for this species in 1864, because the name Vivipara cingulata was already used for a fossil species by Philippe Matheron before.

Subspecies

Three subspecies are recognized, but this species and its subspecies require revision.
This species is found in Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Thailand and Vietnam. The type locality is "Siam".

Ecology

Filopaludina martensi lives in canals and ponds. It feeds as a filter feeder. There are in development 0-14 juveniles in a brood-pouch of a female. Female gave birth to juveniles mainly at night. Parasites of Filopaludina martensi martensi include:
Parasites of Filopaludina martensi include trematode Multicotyle purvisi.

Human use

Filopaludina martensi is used as part of the cuisine of Thailand.