Wikipedia:WikiProject Gastropods/Links

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Online resources for information on gastropods

NOTE: Most of this info and these comments date from 2011, and so may now be out-of-date.

Professional sites in general
Site Remarks
WoRMS World Register of Marine Species is excellent for marine species. Text information is covered by a CC-BY-SA license and can be copied to Wikipedia (using the proper citation). It is mostly fairly accurate, and is being revised constantly.
Atlas of Living Australia http://www.ala.org.au Distribution maps are available under {{Cc-by-3.0-au}} license.
  • families completed: Coelociontidae 1 map; Athoracophoridae 1 map;
  • genera completed: Meridolum 12 maps; Pseudosuccinea 1 map
  • not completed: Nitor medioximus, Helicarion porrectus, Pedinogyra rotabilis, Pleuroxia hinsbyi.
Zoobank ZooBank is useful for searching for newly described species. Also direct links to authors can be added to articles, see for example William B. Rudman
Conus Biodiversity website Fantastic amount of information on species within the genus Conus, assembled by Alan Kohn.
Animalbase Animalbase has lots of info on land/freshwater species, usually European. Authority references for all species and genera. The type species is marked in bold text. All data, all images and all texts at AnimalBase are public domain. (Comment: all AnimalBase content was considered to be public domain since its start, but since July 2010 its public domain status is clearly mentioned on its homepage.)
  • Note: not all the new taxonomic changes are adopted in AnimalBase, for example see [1].
Antarctic Invertebrates

(list of gastropod families)

United States Antarctic Program/Smithsonian Institution's site
The Paleobiology Database -> Fossilworks Paleobiology Database is excellent for families, lists of genera etc, not only for fossil taxa but for some living taxa also. -> Fossilworks. Note, that Fossilworks does not show parenthesis for species.
OBIS Indo-Pacific Molluscan Database Excellent and somewhat similar to Malacolog in its organization.
Nomenclator Zoologicus For genera only. Use it to look up authority and date for a genus, and to confirm the spelling of the genus. Very good indeed, but apparently not quite 100% complete. However, the authority references for virtually all gastropod genera can be obtained from this source.

See hidden category Category:Gastropod genera without authority reference - add original description authority reference between REF tags (for example from http://uio.mbl.edu/NomenclatorZoologicus/) and then remove {{no-gastropod-genus-ref}}. Abbreviations of journals can be found for example at: http://www.bioscience.org/atlases/jourabbr/list.htm

Natural History Museum Rotterdam Excellent shell images, arranged by family. Very useful for checking identifications. Not 100% correct though.
Seaslug Forum By William B. Rudman. Very good indeed, but remember this site includes cutting edge research, so sometimes it includes as yet unpublished opinions on taxonomic questions. Unfortunately no longer available.
Slug Site By Dr. Hans Bertsch. Very good images for checking identifications, plus lots of other info.
Snail's Tales A blog by Aydin Örstan of the Carnegie Museum. His blog entries do sometimes show up in google searches, and sometimes the info is useful to us here on Wikipedia.
Ocean Biogeographic Information System (OBIS) Ocean Biogeographic Information System links species to particular marine locations.
Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (CLEMAM) Taxonomic Database on European Marine Mollusca, maintained by Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle,

Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (Department of Systematics & Evolution), Paris. This site has taxonomic information about all European marine species, including their synonyms, and authority references.

The European Register of Marine Species Contains a listing of many European marine gastropods. Daily updated by a board of taxonomic editors who are world experts on the taxonomy of their relevant taxa.
Conchology A site created by the Belgian malacologist (and shell dealer) Guido Poppe. Some of the taxonomy is quite out of date, plus some of the identifications are incorrect.
NatureServe NatureServe has data on North American non-marine species, especially good on rarer or endangered species.
Universal Biological Indexer and Organizer Just discovered this fantastic website. Provides links to several interesting tools, such as genetic and ontogenetic databanks, regarding several taxa.
MollBase (in German) A complete taxonomy for Central European gastropods. It is up to date, at least for 2007.
Search the Mollusk Bibliography Database Bibliography with focus on freshwater molluscs, searchable according to various criteria, for looking for the most recent sources, etc.
Molluscs of central Europe (in German) A complete taxonomy for Central European gastropods. It is up to date, at least for 2007.
Sealifebase
CIESM Atlas CIESM Atlas of Exotic species in the Mediterranean
Very reliable amateur sites
Site Remarks
Jacksonville Shell Club website Info checked by Harry G. Lee, a first rate amateur. Many good shell images.
Nudipixel A nice site for amateurs to send in their nudibranch pictures. Many photos are verified correctly identified by experts in the field. A good site to add as an external link to on a species page or to check what a species looks like for general reference.
Conquiliologistas do Brasil A reliable source for Brazilian species. The English version of their website is still incomplete though.
Sites that are usually OK
Site Remarks
Gastropods.com Has handy shell illustrations and other info.
Sites that are not always to be trusted
Site Remarks
Schooner Specimen Shells Info from a shell dealer. Taxonomy is out of date.
Integrated Taxonomic Information System (ITIS) ITIS was formed in 1996 and many of its records are not up to date. The site reports an update, but it contains extremely few records for land/freshwater gastropods, (and for marine taxa we use WoRMS). It can be uses for vernacular English names sometimes.

Note: Be careful with using taxonomic info from the websites of many shell dealers. Individual shell collectors' sites also range from good to unreliable.


Please help expand and improve these tables. Some of the sites are better organized and easier to search than others. Some are ones from which info shows up in google searches, but are not necessarily suitable to search routinely.

No one resource is complete for all information. In this Wikipedia project we are trying to use the most reliable taxonomic information. Currently (29/5/2010) that is true at least in the family articles, see also the resources listed in those articles.

Sites not yet assessed Can I ask what other people think of:

See also