Noricella oreinos


Noricella oreinos is a species of small, air-breathing land snail, a terrestrial pulmonate gastropod mollusk in the family Hygromiidae, the hairy snails and their allies. This species is endemic to Austria.
This hairy-shelled snail was once confused with Trochulus hispidus, which it superficially resembles and therefore assigned to the genus Trochulus. Later on was moved to an own Genus Noricella, where it is currently the only species.

Taxonomy

Noricella oreinos comprises two subspecies: N. o. oreinos in Lower Austria and Styria and N. o. scheerpeltzi in Upper Austria.
Both taxa were originally described as regional subspecies of Trochulus hispidus. Later these two subspecies were split from Trochulus hispidus and placed in a separate species because of differences in hair morphology.
Current comprehensive research, based on molecular, morphological and ecological analyses, confirm this split from T. hispidus. Additionally it was pointed out that both subspecies represent separated mitochondrial lines, although there do exist morphologically intermediate forms.

Description

Noricella oreinos can be separated from other representatives of the tribe Trochulini by its small, curled hairs, which have a length of 0.03–0.09 mm. Like the other representatives of this tribe, older individuals and empty shells have often lost the hairs on the shell.
The shell is flat to slightly globular, and the shell width is. Other marks are irregular, coarse ridges on the shell and an internal rib with a basal tooth in the peristome, visible as yellow structure from the outside.
The subspecies N. o. scheerpeltzi is characterized by a groove beneath the keel, but there are intermediate forms between the two subspecies with an incomplete or weakly developed groove.
While the gross anatomy of the reproductive system is similar to that of the genus Trochulus, especially Trochulus hispidus, Noricella oreinos can be unambiguously differentiated by the internal fold pattern of the penis.

Habitat and distribution

Noricella oreinos inhabits primarily boulders, screes and alpine grassland, especially alpine meadows with patchy vegetation coverage, dominated by the sedge species Carex firma, in the Northern Calcareous Alps. Its vertical distribution reaches from the lower subalpine regions to the alpine ecotone, i.e. elevations of. The distribution range reaches from Schneeberg mountain in Lower Austria to Höllengebirge in Upper Austria. Like the helicid snail Cylindrus obtusus, this species is suspected to be an ancient native East-alpine endemic, which survived the glacial times on ice-free parts of the north-eastern alpine margins.