Pleurotomariidae

Pleurotomariidae
Temporal range: Upper Cambrian–Holocene
Apertural view of a shell of Entemnotrochus rumphii
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Mollusca
Class: Gastropoda
Subclass: Vetigastropoda
Order: Pleurotomariida
Superfamily: Pleurotomarioidea
Family: Pleurotomariidae
Swainson, 1840
Genera

See text

Pleurotomariidae, common name the "slit snails", is a family of large marine gastropods in the superfamily Pleurotomarioidea of the subclass Vetigastropoda.[1] This family is a very ancient lineage; there were numerous species in the geological past. The genus includes several hundred fossil forms, mostly Paleozoic. It is one of the oldest gastropod families, commencing in the Cambrian.[2]

The superfamily is currently represented by a group of species that live only in deep water. This family has no subfamilies.

The first living specimens of a species in this family, Perotrochus quoyanus, were dredged in 1879 in deep water off the West Indies by the "Blake" expedition of William Healey Dall.[3]

  1. ^ Frýda J.; Hausdorf B.; Ponder W.; Valdes A.; Warén A. (2005). Bouchet P.; Rocroi J.-P. (eds.). Taxonomy of the Gastropoda. Hackenheim, Germany.: ConchBooks. p. 397. ISBN 3-925919-72-4. ISSN 0076-2997.
  2. ^ G.W. Tryon (1890), Manual of Conchology vol. XII, p. 69
  3. ^ Annals & Magazine of Natural History