Until recently the Cahaba pebblesnail was believed to be extinct, one of 34 snail species fallen victim to dams built along the Coosa River between 1917 and 1967. In 2004 however, biologists discovered the snail living less than fifty miles to the west, in Alabama's Cahaba River, which parallels the Coosa.[4]
Description
Clappia cahabensis has been described by American malacologistWilliam J. Clench in 1965.[2] Clench's type description reads as follows:
Clappia cahabensis, new species. Fig. 2.
Shell small, reaching 3 mm. in length, umbilicate, and smooth.
Color a yellowish brown, whorls 3.5, strongly convex. Suture
indented. Spire extended. Aperture subcircular, slightly flaring,
holostomatous and attached to the body whorl only at its upper
part. Umbilicus narrow and deep. No sculpture. Periostracum
thin. Operculum paucispiral with the nucleus nearly centered.
Animal white.
Remarks. This is the second known species in the genus
Clappia. The type species, C. clappi Walker is known from the
Coosa River at Duncan's Ripple, The Bar, and Higgin's Ferry,
all in Chilton County; and Butting Ram Shoals in Coosa County,
Alabama. The Cahaba River at Centreville is 160 river miles
from the southmost Coosa locality.
This species differs from C. clappi by being proportionately
more attenuate, having a smaller umbilicus and a less flaring
margin of the aperture. Walker stated that the animal was black
in C. clappi (Nautilus 22: 90).
The soft anatomy of C. cahabensis is white.
Ecology
Its natural habitat is rivers.[1]Clappia cahabensis requires rapid flowing sections of river shoals.[3]
References
This article incorporates public domain text from the reference[2]