Aylacostoma

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Aylacostoma
Aylacostoma crenocarina
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Caenogastropoda
Family: Hemisinidae
Genus: Aylacostoma
Spix, 1827[1]
Type species
Aylacostoma glabrum
Spix, 1827
Diversity[2]
32 species

Aylacostoma is a genus of tropical freshwater snails with an operculum. They are part of the family Hemisinidae, a group of aquatic gastropod molluscs. They are found in South and Central America. As a consequence of the Yacyretá Dam, two species are entirely extinct and another is extinct in the wild.[3][4]

Species within genus Aylacostoma include:

Distribution

The native distribution of this genus includes Central and South America.[2]

Life habits

Some species in this genus used to live in areas of white water in the Yacyretá Rapids, Paraná River, feeding on the algae that grow attached to the rocks on the bottom. The water in the area is saturated with oxygen, from the fast-moving waters.[citation needed]

Aylacostoma is a parthenogenic species: the population consists of only females, which increase in number by asexual reproduction. The females give birth to a small number of larvae, no more than three, that are born very well developed, so they have the physical strength needed to attach to a rock and resist the strong current.[citation needed]

Conservation status

References

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