List of non-marine molluscs of South Korea
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The non-marine molluscs of South Korea are a part of the molluscan fauna of South Korea (wildlife of South Korea, environment of South Korea).
A number of species of non-marine molluscs are found in the wild in South Korea. For example, there are 87 non-marine molluscs on Jeju Island
- Semisulcospira libertina (Gould, 1859)[1]
- Austropeplea ollula (Gould, 1859)[1]
- Galba truncatula (O. F. Müller, 1774)[1]
- Radix auricularia (Linnaeus, 1758)[1]
- Physella acuta (Draparnaud, 1805)[1]
- Gyraulus convexiusculus Hutton, 1849[1]
- Polypylis hemisphaerula (Benson, 1842)[1]
- Hippeutis cantori (Benson, 1850)[1]
Land gastropods
Land gastropods in South Korea include:
- Georissa japonica Pilsbry, 1900[1]
- Cyclophorus herklotsi von Martens, 1861[1]
- Platyraphe minutus quelpartensis (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)[1]
- Cyclotus campanulatus von Martens, 1865[1]
- Nakadaella micron (Pilsbry, 1900)[1]
- Spirostoma japonicum japonicum (A. Adams, 1867)[1]
- Chamalycaeus kurodai (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)[1]
- Chamalycaeus hirasei (Pilsbry, 1900)
- Chamalycaeus cyclophoroides (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1909)
- Nobuea elegantistriata Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1943
- Nobuea sp. of Kimura & Noseworthy (2020)[2]

- Pupinella rufa (Sowerby, 1864)[1]
- Arinia chejuensis Kwon & Lee, 1991[1]
- Palaina pusilla (von Martens, 1877)[1]
- Diplommatina paxillus (Gredler, 1881)[1]
- Diplommatina changensis (Kwon & Lee, 1991)[1]
- Diplommatina chejuensis (Kwon & Lee, 1991)[1]
- Diplommatina tyosenica Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1939
- Diplommatina kyobuntoensis Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1943
- Paludinellassiminea japonica (Pilsbry, 1901)
- Paludinellassiminea stricta (Gould, 1859)
- Paludinellassiminea tanegashimae (Pilsbry, 1924)
- Allochroa layardi (H. Adams & A. Adams, 1855)[1]
- Ellobium chinense (Pfeiffer, 1864)
- Laemodonta monilifera (H. Adams & A. Adams, 1854)[1]
- Laemodonta exaratoides Kawabe, 1992[1]
- Laemodonta octanfracta (Jonas, 1845)[1]
- Laemodonta siamensis (Morelet, 1875)
- Microtralia acteocinoides Kuroda & Habe in Habe, 1961[1]
- Melampus nuxcastaneus Kuroda, 1949[1]
- Melampus fasciatus (Deshayes, 1830)[1]
- Melampus taeniolus Hombron & Jaquinot, 1854[1]
- Carychium noduliferum Reinhardt, 1877[1]
- Carychium pessimum Pilsbry, 1902[1]
- Koreozospeum nodongense Lee, Prozorova & Jochum, 2015
- Rathouisiidae sp. of Kimura et al. (2020)[3]
- Allopeas clavulinum (Potiez & Michaud, 1838)
- Sinoennea iwakawa (Pilsbry, 1900)[1]
- Sinoennea cave (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)
- Oxyloma hirasei (Pilsbry, 1901)[1]
- Neosuccinea horticola koreana Pilsbry, 1926
- Cochlicopa lubrica (Müller, 1774)
- Gastrocopta armigerella (Reinhardt, 1877)[4]
- Gastrocopta coreana (Pilsbry, 1916)
- Gastrocopta jinjiroi Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944[5]
- Vertigo japonica coreana Pilsbry, 1919
- Vertigo alpestris uturyotoensis Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944
- Pupilla cryptodon (Heude, 1880)
- Pyramidula micra Pilsbry, 1926
- Pyramidula kobayashii Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944
- Vallonia costata (O. F. Müller, 1774)[1]
- Zoogenetes harpa (Say, 1824)
- Zoogenetes tyosenica Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944
- Eostrobilops hirasei (Pilsbry, 1908)[1]
- Eostrobilops coreana (Pilsbry, 1926–1927)
- Columella edentula (Draparnaud, 1805)
- Ena coreanica Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908[1]
- Mirus junensis Kwon & Lee, 1991
- Euphaedusa fusaniana (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)[1]
- Euphaedusa fusaniana uturyotoensis Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944
- Euphaedusa aculus
- Euphaedusa aculus coreana (Möllendorff, 1887)
- Euphaedusa aculus mokpoensis (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)
- Euphaedusa gottschei (Möllendorff, 1887)
- Euphaedusa hukudai (Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1943)
- Reinia variegata (Adams, 1868)
- Reinia sieboldtii insularis (Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944)
- Zaptyx miyanagai (Kuroda, 1936)
- Zaptyx miyanagai ullundoensis (Kwon & Lee, 1991)
- Trochochlamys crenulata (Gude, 1900)[1]
- Gastrodontella stenogyra (A. Adams, 1868)[1]
- Yamatochlamys lampra (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1904)[1]
- Bekkochlamys subrejecta (Pilsbry & Hirase in Hirase, 1908)[1]
- Bekkochlamys quelpartensis (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)[1]
- Nipponochlamys fusanus (Hirase, 1908)[1]
- Nipponochlamys hypostilbe (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1909)[1]
- Otesiopsis sp. of Kimura et al. (2019)[6]
- Coneuplecta circumcincta (Reinhardt, 1883)
- Coneuplecta japonica (Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1943)
- Coneuplecta chejuensis (Kwon & Lee, 1991)
- Parasitala miyanagai (Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944)
- Discoconulus sinapidium (Reinhardt, 1877)
- Limax flavus Linnaeus, 1758[1]
- Lehmannia marginata (O. F. Müller, 1774)[1]
- Deroceras reticulatum (Müller, 1774)[1]

- Meghimatium bilineatum (Benson, 1842)[1]
- Meghimatium fruhstorferi (Collinge, 1901)[1]
- Aegista chejuensis (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)[1]
- Aegista chosenica (Pilsbry, 1906)[1]
- Aegista gottschei (Möllendorff, 1887)
- Aegista gottschei fusanica (Pilsbry, 1926)
- Aegista gottschei kyobuntonis Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1943
- Aegista proxima (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1909)
- Aegista pyramidata (Pilsbry, 1926)
- Aegista quelpartensis (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1904)[1]
- Aegista tenuissima (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1908)
- Trishoplita pumilio (Pilsbry & Hirase, 1909)[1]
- Lepidopisum verrucosum (Reinhardt, 1877)
- Karaftohelix kurodana (Pilsbry, 1926)
- Karaftohelix koreana (Pfeiffer, 1850)
- Karaftohelix adamsi (Kuroda & Hukuda, 1944)
- Acusta sieboldiana (Pfeiffer, 1850)[1]
- Satsuma myomphala (Martens, 1865)
- Euhadra herklotsi (von Martens, 1860)[1]
- Euhadra dixoni (Pilsbry, 1900)[1]
- Nesiohelix samarangae Kuroda & Miyanaga, 1943[1]