Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación

Terrestrial mollusks are poorly known worldwide. The country has 183 reported species, 30% endemic and 7% are probably extinct. About 400 species are expected to inhabit the country. Biology, ecology, distribution, genetics and other areas of research are unknown for more than 95% of the species. Th...

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Autor principal: Barrientos Llosa, Zaidett
Formato: Online
Idioma:spa
Publicado: Universidad de Costa Rica 2010
Acceso en línea:https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/5402
id RBT5402
record_format ojs
spelling RBT54022022-06-06T18:38:15Z Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación Barrientos Llosa, Zaidett land snails endemism invertebrate conservation moluscos terrestres endemismo conservación de invertebrados Terrestrial mollusks are poorly known worldwide. The country has 183 reported species, 30% endemic and 7% are probably extinct. About 400 species are expected to inhabit the country. Biology, ecology, distribution, genetics and other areas of research are unknown for more than 95% of the species. The most diverse families are Spiraxidae, Orthalicidae and Subulinidae. However, the family that may have more species is Euconulidae. Euconulids inhabit the highlands, where less work has been done. The study of species of high-lands will also rise the endemism rate. Future taxonomic, biological and ecological work should consider their low vagility, tendency to produce new taxa in sympatry, specific microhabitat requirements, hermaphroditism, high evolutionary rate (10% per million years), and divergence between species (2 to 30%). Urgent studies to protect the Costa Rican malacofauna include: distribution, abundance, effect of land use and climate changes on populations. Terrestrial mollusks are poorly known worldwide. The country has 183 reported species, 30% endemic and 7% are probably extinct. About 400 species are expected to inhabit the country. Biology, ecology, distribution, genetics and other areas of research are unknown for more than 95% of the species. The most diverse families are Spiraxidae, Orthalicidae and Subulinidae. However, the family that may have more species is Euconulidae. Euconulids inhabit the highlands, where less work has been done. The study of species of highlands will also rise the endemism rate. Future taxonomic, biological and ecological work should consider their low vagility, tendency to produce new taxa in sympatry, specific microhabitat requirements, hermaphroditism, high evolutionary rate (10% per million years), and divergence between species (2 to 30%). Urgent studies to protect the Costa Rican malacofauna include: distribution, abundance, effect of land use and climate changes on populations. Universidad de Costa Rica 2010-12-01 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Article Text application/pdf https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/5402 10.15517/rbt.v58i4.5402 Revista de Biología Tropical; Vol. 58 No. 4 (2010): Volume 58 – Regular number 4 – December 2010; 1165–1175 Revista de Biología Tropical; Vol. 58 Núm. 4 (2010): Volumen 58 – Número regular 4 – Diciembre 2010; 1165–1175 Revista Biología Tropical; Vol. 58 N.º 4 (2010): Volume 58 – Regular number 4 – December 2010; 1165–1175 2215-2075 0034-7744 10.15517/rbt.v58i4 spa https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/5402/5148 Copyright (c) 2010 Revista de Biología Tropical http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0
institution Universidad de Costa Rica
collection Revista de Biología Tropical
language spa
format Online
author Barrientos Llosa, Zaidett
spellingShingle Barrientos Llosa, Zaidett
Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
author_facet Barrientos Llosa, Zaidett
author_sort Barrientos Llosa, Zaidett
description Terrestrial mollusks are poorly known worldwide. The country has 183 reported species, 30% endemic and 7% are probably extinct. About 400 species are expected to inhabit the country. Biology, ecology, distribution, genetics and other areas of research are unknown for more than 95% of the species. The most diverse families are Spiraxidae, Orthalicidae and Subulinidae. However, the family that may have more species is Euconulidae. Euconulids inhabit the highlands, where less work has been done. The study of species of highlands will also rise the endemism rate. Future taxonomic, biological and ecological work should consider their low vagility, tendency to produce new taxa in sympatry, specific microhabitat requirements, hermaphroditism, high evolutionary rate (10% per million years), and divergence between species (2 to 30%). Urgent studies to protect the Costa Rican malacofauna include: distribution, abundance, effect of land use and climate changes on populations.
title Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
title_short Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
title_full Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
title_fullStr Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
title_full_unstemmed Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
title_sort los moluscos terrestres (mollusca: gastropoda) de costa rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
title_alt Los moluscos terrestres (Mollusca: Gastropoda) de Costa Rica: clasificación, distribución y conservación
publisher Universidad de Costa Rica
publishDate 2010
url https://revistas.ucr.ac.cr/index.php/rbt/article/view/5402
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