Hydrobioides physcus Annandale, 1918

Zhang, Le-Jia, Shu, Shu-Sen, Song, Xin-Yuan, Naing, Nay Htet, Oo, Thaung Naing & Chen, Xiao-Yong, 2025, A revision of Bithyniidae (Mollusca, Gastropoda) from the Inle Lake Basin, Myanmar, Zoosystematics and Evolution 101 (2), pp. 643-660 : 643-660

publication ID

https://doi.org/10.3897/zse.101.143936

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:C0F8018F-646D-491E-A749-715896CBF713

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.15080299

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/78AFC73B-6BC3-5440-A5FA-C11AFC323BB2

treatment provided by

Zoosystematics and Evolution by Pensoft

scientific name

Hydrobioides physcus Annandale, 1918
status

 

Hydrobioides physcus Annandale, 1918 View in CoL comb. rev.

Hydrobioides physcus Annandale, 1918: 121–122, pl. 13, figs 8, 8 a, 9, pl. 14, figs 5, 5 a ( Myanmar, Shan State, Inle Lake). View in CoL

Hydrobioides (Paranerita) physcus View in CoL – Annandale, 1920: 45.

Paranerita physcus – Annandale & Rao, 1925: 115.

Parabithynia physcus View in CoL – Pilsbry, 1928: 108

Gabbia physcus View in CoL – Subba Rao, 1989: 78, figs 127–129.

Diagnosis.

Shell medium, low spiral whorls, weak keel on shoulder, outer lip outward extended.

Material examined.

3 probable paratypes (preserved dry), Inle Lake   GoogleMaps , South Shan, Burma. “ Ex. India Museum ”, NHMUK.20060144 ; 2 specimens (preserved in ethanol), Shan State, Taunggyi District, Inn Paw Hkon, Inthein , riverbank under Inthein Bridge (Fig. 1 B View Figure 1 . d), 20°27'35.9"N, 96°50'32.6"E, 1 Jul. 2024, Le-Jia Zhang leg., KIZ.2400061 –2400062 GoogleMaps 2 specimens (preserved in ethanol), Shan State, Taunggyi District, Nyaungshwe, Inle Lake , floating islands near Intha (Fig. 1 B View Figure 1 . c), 20°36'33.4"N, 96°54'53.8"E, 3 Jul. 2024, Le-Jia Zhang leg., KIZ.2400063 –2400064 GoogleMaps .

Description.

Shell (Fig. 7 View Figure 7 ) medium for the family (Table 1 View Table 1 ), relatively thick, solid, subglobose to globose, white or bright yellow to orange yellow, with four whorls at adulthood; teleoconch low, with a keel on shoulder, forming weak nodules on shoulder with vertical growth lines, two weak additional keels on body whorl; aperture ovate, lip thickened, always more than half of shell in height, outer lip outward extended; umbilicus covered by inner lip completely.

Operculum (Figs 7 A View Figure 7 , 4 B View Figure 4 ) calcium, ovate, thin, slightly smaller than aperture, transparent grey; exterior surface smooth, nucleus close to the central of operculum; interior surface with relatively thin outer opercular region, narrow weak concentric veins on the margin of inner opercular region, nuclear region relatively large, with irregular veins and grains.

Penis (Fig. 5 B View Figure 5 ) with a white penial appendix located in the central of penis, penial appendix slightly shorter than distal part of penis.

Radula (Fig. 8 View Figure 8 ) taenioglossate; central tooth upper margin with one broad triangle central cusp and two to three small sharp cusps on either side, lateral margin each with two to three small sharp cusps; lateral tooth with one broad tongue-shape central cusp and two to three small sharp cusps; inner marginal tooth with 10 to 11 small cusps; outer marginal tooth with six small cusps.

Remarks.

This species can be easily distinguished from other bithyniid snails based on the thick subglobose to globose shell with keels and shoulder. It also can be distinguished from H. nassa based on opercular characters and less small cusps on inner and outer marginal teeth. This species is the type species and only extant species of genus Parabithynia Pilsbry, 1928 , which is now endemic to Inle Lake. Several fossil species of this genus were reported from China and Russia ( Popova 1981; Yu et al. 1978), but the assignment needs a revision. Our molecular study confirms that this species is the sister species of H. nassa , with a close genetic relationship (p distance of 16 S: 4.3–4.5 %). The similarity in shell (especially the extended outer lip), operculum, and male genital structure also supports that these two species should be placed in one genus. Therefore, we consider that Parabithynia is a synonym of Hydrobioides . Hydrobioides physcus comb. rev. should be re-assigned to its original genus.

Habitat and distribution.

Inle Lake and the big rivers connected to Inle Lake; swamps in Heho, Shan State, Myanmar.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Mollusca

Class

Gastropoda

Order

Littorinimorpha

Family

Bithyniidae

SubFamily

Mysorellinae

Genus

Hydrobioides

Loc

Hydrobioides physcus Annandale, 1918

Zhang, Le-Jia, Shu, Shu-Sen, Song, Xin-Yuan, Naing, Nay Htet, Oo, Thaung Naing & Chen, Xiao-Yong 2025
2025
Loc

Parabithynia physcus

Pilsbry HA 1928: 108
1928
Loc

Paranerita physcus

Annandale N & Rao HS 1925: 115
1925
Loc

Hydrobioides physcus

Annandale N 1918: 122
1918
Loc

Hydrobioides (Paranerita) physcus

Hydrobioides (Paranerita) physcus – Annandale, 1920: 45.
Loc

Gabbia physcus

Gabbia physcus – Subba Rao, 1989: 78, figs 127–129.