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Bania

Gastropoda - Hydrobiidae

Synonymy list
YearName and author
1872Bania Brusina
2013Bania Neubauer et al. pp. 145 - 146

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RankNameAuthor
kingdomAnimalia()
Bilateria
EubilateriaAx 1987
Protostomia
Spiralia
superphylumLophotrochozoa
phylumMollusca
RankNameAuthor
classGastropoda
subclassCaenogastropoda(Cox 1959)
Sorbeoconcha(Ponder and Lindberg 1997)
Hypsogastropoda(Ponder and Lindberg 1997)
superfamilyTruncatelloideaGray 1840
familyHydrobiidaeTroschel 1857
genusBaniaBrusina 1872

If no rank is listed, the taxon is considered an unranked clade in modern classifications. Ranks may be repeated or presented in the wrong order because authors working on different parts of the classification may disagree about how to rank taxa.

G. †Bania Brusina 1872
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Bania dokici Brusina 1902
Bania gobanzi Frauenfeld 1864
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Invalid names: Paludina exigua Gobanz 1854 [replaced]
Bania hoeckae Harzhauser and Binder 2004
Bania immutata von Frauenfeld 1856
Bania obliquaecostata Neubauer et al. 2013
Bania pachychila Brusina 1902
Bania panica Neumayr 1869
Bania pauluccii Brusina 1907
Bania prototypica Brusina 1872
Bania pseudoglobula d'Orbigny 1852
Bania spreta Brusina 1897
Bania stosiciana Brusina 1874
Bania torbariana Brusina 1874
Bania tripaloi Neumayr 1869
Bania valvatoides Brusina 1874
Diagnosis
ReferenceDiagnosis
T. A. Neubauer et al. 2013Comprising small and rather sturdy species, always with reticulate protoconch and convex to step-like whorls.

Minute shells, usually not exceeding 3.5 mm in height. The protoconch is always wrinkled (reticulate), usually with strongest expression in early ontogeny and fading out towards the mostly indistinct transition to the teleoconch; it consists of somewhat more than one whorl. More or less prominent, prosocline growth lines cover the teleoconch. The shell consists of up to five whorls, which are usually strongly convex and sometimes form a stepped spire. In most cases, the last whorl makes up more than two-thirds of shell height. The aperture is ovoid, usually everted and sometimes conspicuously detached from the base. Occasionally, it may be particularly thickened. An umbilicus may occur depending on grade of detachment, thickening and growth style.