Advanced Search
World Species
Help
  • Home
  • Geography
  • ↓
    • AZE Sites
    • Biodiversity Hotspots
    • Climate Data
    • Ecoregions
    • Habitat Vegetation Classification
    • Important Bird Areas
    • Irreplacable Areas
    • Land Use
    • Protected Areas
  • Ecosystems
  • ↓
    • African Grasslands
    • Alaska Forest
    • Alaska Tundra
    • Antarctica
    • Australian Grasslands
    • Commanster
    • Coral Reef
    • Lake Michigan
    • Namib Desert
    • Northern Virginia
    • Rain Forest
    • More ...
  • Lists
  • ↓
    • Animal Cams
    • Animal Sounds
    • Cannibals
    • Common Species
    • EDGE Analysis
    • Emblems
    • Endangered Species
    • Invasive Species
    • Raptor Priority
    • Top 100 Endangered Species
  • Glossary
  • About
Animalia > Mollusca > Gastropoda > Triphoridae > Metaxia

Metaxia (Convex triphora)

Wikipedia Abstract

Metaxia is a genus of minute sea snails with right-handed shell-coiling, marine gastropod mollusks or micromollusks in the family Triphoridae, which are mostly left-handed in shell-coiling.
View Wikipedia Record: Metaxia

Species

Metaxia abrupta
Metaxia albicephala
Metaxia bacillum
Metaxia brunnicephala
Metaxia carinapex
Metaxia convexa (Convex triphora)
Metaxia degrangei
Metaxia diadema
Metaxia duplicarinata
Metaxia elizabethclinghamae
Metaxia espinosai
Metaxia exaltata
Metaxia excelsa
Metaxia fuscoapicata
Metaxia gongyloskymnus
Metaxia hapax
Metaxia hectica
Metaxia kermadecensis
Metaxia maoria
Metaxia merignacensis
Metaxia metaxa
Metaxia permacra
Metaxia polynesica
Metaxia prompta
Metaxia propinqua
Metaxia propria
Metaxia protolineata
Metaxia quadrata
Metaxia quadrilineata
Metaxia rugulosa
Metaxia solitaria
Metaxia taeniolata
Metaxia trachycosmeta
Metaxia tricarinata
Metaxia turoniensis
Metaxia vasconensis
Metaxia vicina
Metaxia voorthuyseni

External References

Species taxanomy provided by GBIF Secretariat (2022). GBIF Backbone Taxonomy. Checklist dataset https://doi.org/10.15468/39omei accessed via GBIF.org on 2023-06-13; License: CC BY 4.0
  Email © WorldSpecies.org 2020-2023