The genus Klikia was originally described by Henry Augustus Pilsbry in 1895.[1]
Pilsbry's original text (the type description) reads as follows:
Section Klikia Pilsbry, 1894.
Shell depressed-globose, narrowly umbilical, with convex, obtuse spire and round periphery. Surface costulate-striate and
minutely papillae in regular diamond pattern. Last whorl constricted behind the lip, which is well reflexed and thickened. Type
H. osculum Thomae [de], pl. 71, fig. 49.
This apparently extinct type of Helicodonta is characteristic of
middle European Miocene, where it coexisted -with species of Caracollina, such as phacodes Thomae, and with species of typical Helicodonta; H. involuta Thomae being allied to the recent angigyra
and biconcava. The strong differentiation of these sectional groups
at as early a period as the lower Miocene (when they were, in fact,
as strongly differentiated as in the recent fauna), argues a vastly
greater antiquity for the genus as a whole. This group is named in
honor of Gottlieb Klika, author of an excellent memoir upon tertiary
land and fresh-water shells of Bohemia.