Haminoea is a genus of medium-sized sea snails or bubble snails, marine opisthobranch gastropod molluscs in the family Haminoeidae, the haminoea bubble snails, part of the clade Cephalaspidea, the headshield slugs and bubble snails.
Systematics
Three different spellings (Haminoea, Haminea, Haminaea) were used for this genus over two hundred years. The ICZN finally made a decision that the correct spelling is Haminoea.
Oskars et al. (2019) restricted Haminoea to species from the Atlantic and eastern Pacific, and resurrected Haloa and Lamprohaminoea for Indo-Pacific species.
Description
Many species within this genus have green algae growing on their shells. The posterior tip of the headshield is bilobed, except in Haminoea elegans.
Species
Species within the genus Haminoea include:
- Haminoea antillarum <small>d'Orbigny, 1841</small> - Antilles Glassy-bubble, Antilles Paper-bubble - Distribution: Florida, Caribbean, Brazil. Length: 12âÂÂ20 mm.
- Haminoea antillarum guadaloupensis <small>Sowerby II, 1868</small> - Distribution : Florida, Cuba, Guadeloupe, Length: 12âÂÂ18 mm, Description: globose shell with greenish yellow color, covered with longitudinal striae (= stripes); mantle with white to greenish background with small black dots.
- Haminoea binotata <small>Pilsbry, 1895</small> (nomen dubium)
- Haminoea cyanocaudata <small>Heller & Thompson, 1983</small>
- Description : translucent with green color (caused by growths of green algae), mottled with lightbrown spots, outlined in white, and darker brown dots; There can be a wide variation in the color pattern. This species is fairly uncommon, but, when found, it is always in large aggregations.
- Haminoea cymbiformis <small>Carpenter, 1856</small>
- Distribution : Mexico
- Haminoea elegans <small>Gray, 1825</small> Atlantic Elegant Paper Bubble; Elegant Glassy Bubble
- Distribution : West Africa, Florida, Caribbean, Venezuela, Colombia, Brazil
- Length : 23.5 mm
- Description : found at depths up to 34 m; translucent mantle with patches of brown and black; posterior end of the headshield is not bilobed; shell with spiral grooves.
- Haminoea exigua <small>Schaefer, 1992</small>
- Haminoea fusari <small>Alvarez, E.F.GarcÃÂa, & Villani, 1993</small>
- Haminoea glabra <small>A. Adams, 1850</small>
- Distribution : Yucatán, Panama
- Length : 4.3 mm
- Haminoea hydatis <small>Linnaeus, 1758</small>
- Distribution : SW Britain, Ireland, France and south to the Mediterranean, Madeira and Canaries; Ascension Island, St. Helena, west coast of Africa
- Length : 8âÂÂ30 mm (shell : 15 mm)
- Description : fragile shell hidden by the mantle and parapodial lobes in crawling animals. Herbivorous swimming dark brown snail found on muddy sands, shell grit and algae fields, down to unknown depths.
- Haminoea maray <small>Galvão Filho, P. Lima & Simone, 2024</small>
- Haminoea natalensis <small>(Krauss, 1848)</small>
- Haminoea navicula <small>da Costa, 1778</small> - Distribution: SW Britain, south to the Mediterranean, Ascension Island, St. Helena; Atlantic and Mediterranean costas of France and Spain; Black Sea, Length: up to 70 mm (shell: 32 mm), Description: larger species, with heavier and darker-white shell; cephalic shield with short tentacular processes at front. Found on muddy sands especially among Eelgrass, Zostera marina. Does not swim. This species is able to change its color to correspond with its environment. The color pigments (or melanophores) in the skin can be obscured. The skin color can change in this way from dark brown to white in four to five hours. (Edlinger, Malacologia 22; 1982)
- Haminoea orbignyana <small>A. de Férussac, 1822</small>
- Distribution : France to West Africa; Mediterranean, Eastern Atlantic
- Length : 7 mm
- Haminoea orteai <small>F. G. GarcÃÂa Talavera, Murillo, & Templado, 1987</small>
- Distribution : Southern Spain
- Haminoea padangensis <small>Thiele, 1825</small> PadangâÂÂs Delicate Bubble
- Distribution : West-Pacific
- Length : 11 mm
- Haminoea peruviana <small>d'Orbigny, 1842</small>
- Distribution : Peru
- Length : 11 mm
- Haminoea petitii <small>d'Orbigny, 1841 Straight Glassy-bubble </small>
- Distribution: Caribbean, Florida, Colombia, Brazil
- Length : 12 mm
- Haminoea solitaria <small>T. Say, 1822</small> Solitary Glassy-bubble, SayâÂÂs Paper-bubble, Solitary Paper-bubble: synonym of Haminella solitaria <small>(Say, 1822)</small> (unaccepted combination)
- Distribution : Canada, Massachusetts to Florida
- Length : 8âÂÂ19 mm
- Description : common bubble snail; oblong smooth shell; bluish-white to yellowish-brown.
- Haminoea succinea <small>(T.A. Conrad, 1846)</small> Amber Glassy-bubble
- Distribution : caribbean, Florida, Colombia, Venezuela, Bermuda
- Length : 12 mm
- Haminoea templadoi <small>Garcia, Perez-Hurtado & Garcia-Gomez, 1991</small>
- Haminoea vesicula <small>A. A. Gould, 1855</small> Blister Glassy-bubble, White Paper-bubble, GouldâÂÂs Paper-bubble
- Distribution : West America, Alaska, Gulf of California, Mexico
- Length : 19 mm
- Description : common on muddy flats and on eelgrass; the middle posterior part of the cephalic shield has an indent; brown or greenish-yellowy shell; large, barrel-shaped body whorl covered by a rust periostracum; involute (= sunken) spire; long aperture; outer lip gradually increasing in width; the snail cannot retract completely into its shell.
- Haminoea virescens <small>Sowerby, 1833</small> Green Glassy-bubble, Green Paper-bubble, SowerbyâÂÂs Paper-bubble
- Distribution : Northwestern America from Puget Sound (Seattle) to Gulf of California.
- Length : 13âÂÂ19 mm
- Description : Thin, fragile shell is ovate and yellowish-green; involute (= sunken) spire, with small perforation; body whorl with longitudinal growth ridges and minute grooves; large aperture; thin outer lip
- Haminoea wallisi <small>Gray, 1825</small>
- Distribution : Australia
- Distribution : New Zealand
- Length : 30 mm (shell : 20 mm)
- Description : very common; translucent snail with variable coloring, going from pale color with black dots, to a uniform black color; broad headshield; parapodia fold up and envelop most of the shell; thin, ovate translucent shell.
Species brought into synonymy:
- Haminoea alfredensis <small>P. Bartsch, 1915</small>: synonym of Haminoea natalensis <small>(Krauss, 1848)</small> (probable synonym)
- Haminoea angelensis <small>F. Baker & G. D. Hanna, 1927</small> - Distribution: Gulf of California, Mexico, Length: 7 mm: synonym of Haminoea vesicula <small>(A. Gould, 1855)</small>
- Haminoea angusta <small>Gould, 1859</small>:synonym of Cylichnatys angusta <small>(Gould, 1859)</small>
- Haminoea callidegenita <small>(Gibson & Chia, 1989)</small>:synonym of Haminoea japonica <small>Pilsbry, 1895</small> Distribution: West America, Description: has a deeply bifurcate headshield.
- Haminoea cornea <small>(Lamarck, 1822)</small>:synonym of Haminoea navicula <small>(da Costa, 1778)</small>
- Haminoea crocata <small>Pease, 1860</small>:synonym of Haloa crocata <small>(Pease, 1860)</small>
- Haminoea curta <small>A. Adams, 1850</small>: synonym of Liloa curta <small>(A. Adams, 1850)</small>
- Haminoea cymbalum <small>Quoy & Gaimard, 1833</small>:synonym of Lamprohaminoea cymbalum <small>(Quoy & Gaimard, 1833)</small>
- Haminoea cymoelium <small>Monterosato, 1917</small>:synonym of Haminoea hydatis <small>(Linnaeus, 1758)</small>
- Haminoea cyanomarginata <small>Heller & Thompson, 1983</small>:synonym of Lamprohaminoea cyanomarginata <small>(Heller & Thompson, 1983)</small>
- Haminoea flavescens <small>(A. Adams, 1850)</small>: synonym of Haloa japonica <small>(Pilsbry, 1895)</small>
- Haminoea fusca <small>Pease, 1863</small>: synonym of Haloa japonica <small>(Pilsbry, 1895)</small>
- Distribution : Indo-Pacific
- Length : 25 mm
- Description : color of the shell : varies from greenish to brown, and light purple.
- Haminoea galba <small>W. H. Pease, 1861</small>: synonym of Haloa crocata <small>(Pease, 1860)</small> (junior subjective synonym)
- Distribution : Indo Pacific
- Haminoea grisea <small>E.A. Smith, 1875</small>:synonym of Cylichna alba <small>(Brown, 1827)</small>
- Haminoea japonica <small>Pilsbry, 1895</small>: synonym of Haloa japonica <small>(Pilsbry, 1895)</small>
- Haminoea margaritoides <small>Kuroda & Habe, 1971</small> - Distribution: Japan, Length: 7 mm: synonym of Haloa japonica <small>(Pilsbry, 1895)</small>
- Haminoea maugeansis <small>Burn, 1966</small>:synonym of Papawera maugeansis <small>(Burn, 1966)</small>
- Haminoea ovalis <small>Pease, 1868</small>:synonym of Haloa ovalis <small>(Pease, 1868)</small>
- Haminoea petersi <small>(Martens, 1879)</small>: synonym of Haloa petersi <small>(E. von Martens, 1879)</small>
- Haminoea taylorae <small>E. J. Petuch, 1987</small>:synonym of Haminoea elegans <small>(Gray, 1825)</small>
- Haminoea tenella <small>(A. Adams in Sowerby, 1850)</small>: synonym of Haloa pemphis <small>(R. A. Philippi, 1847)</small>
- Haminoea tenera <small>A. Adams, 1850</small>: synonym of Haloa constricta <small>(A. Adams, 1850)</small>
- Distribution : Australia
- Haminoea zelandiae <small>Gray, 1843</small>:synonym of Papawera zelandiae <small>(Gray, 1843)</small>
References
Further reading
- Powell A. W. B. (1979). New Zealand Mollusca. William Collins Publishers Ltd, Auckland, New Zealand,
- Pownall G. (1979). New Zealand Shells and Shellfish. Seven Seas Publishing Pty Ltd, Wellington, New Zealand 1979
- Vaught, K.C. (1989). A classification of the living Mollusca. American Malacologists: Melbourne, FL (USA). . XII, 195 pp.
- Gofas, S.; Le Renard, J.; Bouchet, P. (2001). Mollusca, in: Costello, M.J. et al. (Ed.) (2001). European register of marine species: a check-list of the marine species in Europe and a bibliography of guides to their identification. Collection Patrimoines Naturels, 50: pp. 180âÂÂ213
- Gofas, S.; Afonso, J.P.; BrandÃÂ o, M. (Ed.). (S.a.). Conchas e Moluscos de Angola = Coquillages et Mollusques d'Angola. [Shells and molluscs of Angola]. Universidade Agostinho / Elf Aquitaine Angola: Angola. 140 pp.
- Willan, R. (2009). Opisthobranchia (Mollusca). In: Gordon, D. (Ed.) (2009). New Zealand Inventory of Biodiversity. Volume One: Kingdom Animalia. 584 pp
External links