"Endodontoid land snails
from Pacific islands. Part I. Endodontidae". Such is the title of the
rather large, hardcover volume under review. This monograph begins with a
curious disclaimer. It was prepared with the support of National Science
Foundation grant No. DEB75-14048. It seems the foundation doesn't just attack
creationists! They are also interested in endodontoid land snails, particularly
those of the family Endodontidae. However, the foundation sternly warns that
any and all opinions, findings, conclusions or recommendations expressed in this
publication are those of the authors and don't necessarily reflect the view of
NSF.
Presumably, this includes the computer-generated phylogeny of Thaumatodon, Zyzzyxdonta and Aaadonta. Not to mention the distribution of Opanara in the Mt. Perahu region. And what about the frequency of distribution of whorl counts in adult Libera fratercula? Don't blame the NSF if the authors got it all wrong! Incidentally, I didn't misspell "Zyzzyxdonta" and "Aaadonta". Something tells me whoever named these snails in Latin was a great fan of the Guinness Book of World Records! It's good to know that at least snail-collectors have a certain sense of humor, I know from previous experience at Amazon that bug-collectors and bird-watchers have none...
;-)
This is the first of two monographs on the endodontoid land snails of Polynesia, Micronesia and Fiji. The authors claim to have analyzed 26,000 specimens belonging to 285 species-level taxa in 215 genera. Hawaii have been mostly excluded from this study, however, since nobody has had the time, guts or inclination to go through the 58,000 Hawaiian specimens available in various collections. Why not? I've heard the Big Pineapple is a really nice place for a vacation trip. For the morbidly small sum of 2500 dollars per month (excluding taxes), I'm prepared to print out the specimen labels. Deal? Otherwise, I must say that snail research seems to be great fun. The author reveals that just a few hours of collecting on the Fijian islands led to the discovery of two entirely new species of land snails, previously unknown to science! Indeed, it's possible that many unknown snails have already been driven to extinction by invasive species from the mainland, including ants and...other snails!
The monograph contains the following chapters: Previous studies, Materials studied, Methods of analysis, Patterns of Morphological Variation, Phylogeny and Classification, and a systematic review with the actual species presentations. The drawings are extremely boring (as in "I was bored to death"). To a layman, one snail shell really does look like any other snail shell.
Perhaps I don't want that job, after all...
Besides, I probably would misspell Zyzzyxdonta, anyway.