• Title/Summary/Keyword: molluscan fauna

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A Review on the Study of Molluscan Fauna in the Han River (한강수계(漢江水系) 패류상(貝類相) 연구(硏究)의 개관(槪觀))

  • Kim, Duk-Man
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.1 no.1
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    • pp.51-63
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    • 1985
  • Studies on the molluscan fauna in Han River were chronologically summarized in this review. In summarizing the related reports, the fauna in the middle- and down-streams of Han River consisted of 2 classes, 5 subclasses, 5 orders, 10 families and 21 species with 3 variations. In addition to the chronological review on molluscan fauna, water pollution problems of Han River according to the urbanization and industrialization around the Seoul areas were ecologically discussed.

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Molluscan Fauna in Lower Part of Han River, Korea (한강 하류의 패류 분포상)

  • 김재진
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.14 no.2
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    • pp.161-166
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    • 1998
  • Mollusks were collected with Ponar grab from seven stations in lower part of Han river, Korea from June 1995 through May 1996. Basket sampler with artificial substrate was also employed to collect the adhesive mollusks. In addition to above mentioned sampling stations, Bam islet was surveyed. A total of species, Corbicula fluminea, Anodonta woodiana, Unio douglasiae, Limnoperna fortunei, corbicula fenouilliana and Physa acuta, were collected in lower part of Han river. Author reviewed the literatures on the ecological survey of molluscan fauna in Han river.

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Marine Molluscan Fauna of Jindo Island

  • Lee, Yucheol;Choe, Yeongjae;Shin, Youngheon;Kim, Taeho;Park, Jina;Park, Joong-Ki
    • Animal Systematics, Evolution and Diversity
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    • no.spc9
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    • pp.30-36
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    • 2016
  • As a part of the commemorative joint faunal survey for the 30th anniversary of the Korean Society of Systematic Zoology, the molluscan fauna of Jindo Island was investigated based on sample collection from 6 localities from the 6 to the 8 of Jul 2016. A total of 114 molluscan species from 47 families were collected and identified. Among these, 42 species from 11 families are newly reported from Jindo Island and combining the previous records with the present study totals 157 species from 57 families. Distribution of species records indicates that marine biogeography of Jindo Island represent an overlapping zone for marine organisms which dwell in the Yellow sea and the southern sea areas of Korean waters.

A Catalogue of Molluscan Fauna In Korea (한국산 연체동물 목록)

  • Lee, Jun-Sang;Min, Duk-Ki
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.93-217
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    • 2002
  • Molluscan specimens collected in the whole country of Korea during the from 1994 through 2002, were identified and classified. A total of 1,560 molluscan species were listed in this study; one species in class Aplacophora, 18 species in class Polyplacophora, 1,038 species in class Gastropoda, 467 species in class Bivalvia, 14 species in class Scaphopoda and 22 species in class Cephalopoda. Among the identified species, 360 species (three species in class Polyplacophora, 266 species in class Gastropoda, 85 species in class Bivalvia, 6 species in class Scaphopoda) are newly recorded to Korean fauna.

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Two Unrecorded Molluscan Species (Atrina teramachii and Liocranchia reinhardti) from Korean Waters

  • Son, Min-Ho
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.25 no.2
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    • pp.91-92
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    • 2009
  • Two molluscan species belonging to Bivalvia (Atrina teramachii Habe) and Cephalopoda (Liocranchia reinhardti Steenstrup) were found new to the Korean malacofauna. The author report, consequently, two additional molluscan species new to the fauna with figures and remarks on slight morphological variation comparing to the original and previous descriptions.

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Biogeography of marine bivalve mollusks of eastern Korea

  • Lutaenko, Konstantin A.;Noseworthy, Ronald G.
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.30 no.3
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    • pp.281-293
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    • 2014
  • The biogeography and diversity patterns of the marine bivalve molluscan fauna of the East Sea coast of South Korea are analyzed. The total species richness of the continental Korean bivalve fauna, excluding insular regions (Dok-do and Ullung-do), is 304, and from north to south the species richness of bivalves increases showing a clear gradient: Gangwon, 143 species ${\rightarrow}$ Gyeongbuk, 131 ${\rightarrow}$ Gyeongnam, 183. A zonal-geographical analysis of the entire fauna shows that the great majority are warm-water mollusks, constituting 77% (subtropical, 37%, tropical-subtropical, 30%, subtropical-boreal, 10%), The number of boreal (low-boreal, widely distributed boreal and circumboreal) species is lower, 19%, whereas boreal-arctic mollusks have only 4%. This demonstrates that the bivalve molluscan fauna of the eastern coast of Korea is subtropical, and has more affinities to the fauna of the East China Sea than to the northern East Sea. Separate analysis by provinces shows the increasing role of warm-water mollusks from north to south. While tropical-subtropical and subtropical species constitute 47% (68 species) in Gangwon, their dominance increases to 71% (93 species) in Gyeongbuk, and to 80% (148 species) in Gyeongnam. The Gyeongnam bivalve fauna is the most diverse in species composition and has the largest number of "endemics" (species known only from this province), 46%. The Gangwon fauna also contains many "endemics", up to 40%, while Gyeongbuk is an intermediate zone with low "endemicity", only at one-fifth of the regional fauna, and has the most species in common among the three provinces.

New Record of brackish water snail, Iravadia (Fluviocingula) elegantula (Sorbeoconcha:Iravadiidae), in Korea

  • Lee, Jun-Sang;Min, Duk-Ki
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.211-212
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    • 2009
  • One Iravadiid shell Iravadia (Fluviocingula) elegantula (A. Adams, 1861), from the brackish waters in Kangwon-do was recorded as new to the Korean molluscan fauna. The shell is typically solid and narrowely ovate-conic. The protoconch is small, planorboid to depressed dome-shaped, typically with a minute first whorl. Including the new records in this study, the family Iravadiidae contained 2 genera and 3 species in the Korean water.

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Report on the molluscan fauna in Tongbatarl lagoon on the east coast of Jeju, Korea (제주 동부연안 통밧알 석호의 연체동물상 보고)

  • Lee, Hee-Jung;Noseworthy, Ronald G.;Park, SangRul;Hong, Hyun-Ki;Lee, Byung-Gul;Choi, Kwang-Sik
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.30 no.1
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    • pp.95-99
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    • 2014
  • In the present study, we surveyed the molluscan fauna in a lagoon located near Seong-san harbor on the east coast of Jeju Island in July 2012. For the survey, a $25{\times}25cm$ quadrat was deployed over 3 randomly selected sites in the intertidal area of the lagoon. Sediment from the surface to a depth of 25 cm in the quadrat was removed and sieved using a 1 mm mesh sieve. All molluscan fauna retained on the sieve was identified to the species level. From the survey, 25 species of mollusca belonging to 2 orders and 16 families were identified. Species richness, in terms of total number of species, was found to be the highest at sampling site 1, where the substrate was composed of coarse sand and some rocks, while it was lowest at sampling site 3, composed of compact fine sand. Regardless of the type of substrate at the sampling sites, the mud-creeping snail Batillaria cumingii (Crosse, 1862) occurred at a high density, ranging from $324-468ind./m^2$. The luciniid bivalve Pillucina pisidium also occurred at a high density at sampling site 1, at $336ind./m^2$, while the density of this species was only $4ind./m^2$ at sampling site 3. The Manila clam Ruditapes philippinarum could be found at all 3 sampling sites with very low density ranging from $16-48ind./m^2$. The density and species richness of molluscs observed in this study was lower compared to the previously reported molluscan fauna in Jeju Island, suggesting that further investigation needs to be carried out to conserve the unique marine lagoon ecosystem in Jeju Island.

Two New Records of Trochidae(Gastropoda, Orthogastropoda) in Korea

  • Lee, Jun-Sang;Min, Duk-Ki
    • The Korean Journal of Malacology
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.105-107
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    • 2008
  • Two trochid shells of the genus Ginebis, G. crumpii(Pilsbry, 1893) and the genus Enida, E. japonica A. Adams, 1860, collected from the coast of Jeju Island in Korea are reported. Ginebis crumpii and Enida japonica are closely related to Calliostoma Swainson, but can be differentiated by the features of the aperture and umbilicus. These species are a new records to the Korean Molluscan fauna. At present, G. crumpii and E. japonica are the only species of the represented in Korean water. Including the new records in this study, the family Trichidae contains 30 genera and 57 species in Korean water.

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