Hydrobiidae

Wesselingh, Frank, Poorten, Jan Johan ter, Kijashko, Pavel, Albrecht, Christian, Anistratenko, Olga Yu, Frolov, Pavel, Gándara, Alberto Martinez, Gittenberger, Arjan, Gogaladze, Aleksandre, Mikhail Karpinsky, Popa, Luis, Sands, Arthur F, Vandendorpe, Justine & Wilke, Thomas, 2019, Mollusc species from the Pontocaspian region - an expert opinion list, ZooKeys 827, pp. 31-124 : 64

publication ID

https://dx.doi.org/10.3897/zookeys.827.31365

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:10B66389-5E42-4E52-87D8-F49E2405D651

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/74F5A65C-021B-1317-1AAD-6909F1EE8CAC

treatment provided by

ZooKeys by Pensoft

scientific name

Hydrobiidae
status

 

Family Hydrobiidae View in CoL Stimpson, 1865

Remarks. The Hydrobiidae form the most species-rich mollusc group in the Pontocaspian region. However, in general, useful shell characters are few and highly variable (Wilke and Delicado in press). Descriptions in the past have often been very general, and illustrations of types are notably poor for several of the endemic taxa. A strong tendency of naming large numbers of species has developed throughout the 20th century (e.g., Logvinenko and Starobogatov 1969), but for some groups where morphological and genetic analyses could be performed (e.g., Caspiohydrobia spp.) it has been demonstrated that actual species numbers were much lower than the number of species described ( Haase et al. 2010). For many of the endemic species, especially in the genus Turricaspia , the apparent loss of types, combined with the lack of living material makes it impossible to assess their taxonomic status. Currently, a number of taxonomic works is in progress on the endemic Pontocaspian hydrobiid groups, and some different insights on the genus-level classifications exist. Here, we adopt a conservative approach, mostly based on Neubauer et al. (2018).