1963
DOI: 10.2307/3626549
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New Mollusk Records from Oklahoma and Their Zoogeographical Significance

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1978
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Cited by 5 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…However, this single known stocking event does not adequately explain signatures of substantial, heterogeneous admixture in Neosho streams (Gunn et al, 2020 ). Unreported or inadvertent introductions may be responsible; otherwise, admixture may be a natural byproduct of stream piracy (Branson, 1963 ) or recent flooding. Both scenarios substantially impact the genetic integrity of the species in this region.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, this single known stocking event does not adequately explain signatures of substantial, heterogeneous admixture in Neosho streams (Gunn et al, 2020 ). Unreported or inadvertent introductions may be responsible; otherwise, admixture may be a natural byproduct of stream piracy (Branson, 1963 ) or recent flooding. Both scenarios substantially impact the genetic integrity of the species in this region.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although E. cubensis was known from the Mississippi River Basin at Bayou Pierre and Ramblin' Bayou (both in De Soto Parish, Louisiana) (Walker, 1915;Heard, 1965) it was first reported upstream in the Mississippi-Red River drainage from Briar Creek, near Willis, Marshall County, Oklahoma (33.95454°N, −96.84234°W) in August of 1961 (Branson, 1963) and the Little River, northeast of Idabel, McCurtain County, Oklahoma (33.94265°N, − 94.75588°W) in 1964 (Hubricht, 1965). E. cubensis were subsequently found in the Caney River (Mississippi-Arkansas-Verdigris River Dr.), 2.4 km W Elgin, Chautauqua County, Kansas (37.00358°N, −96.31611°W) in 1975, which until the present time represented the northernmost locality for the species in the U.S. (Mackie and Huggins, 1976).…”
mentioning
confidence: 97%
“…In 2006 Heard, 1965, with data from Branson, 1963;Hubricht, 1965;Mackie and Huggins, 1976, and data from the Florida Museum of Natural History on-line malacology database).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High density populations live in humid, mixed hardwood forests with deep leaf litter and exposed dolomite bedrock outcrops, typically with permanent streams (Branson 1963). The patchy distribution of Hendersonia occulta and the species' reliance on the deep leaf litter of undisturbed forest habitat has resulted in its imperilment.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The range of this species extends southward to an isolated population on the stone bluffs of the Elk River in Oklahoma. Lawrence, Kansas is the site of the westernmost extant population (Branson 1963).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%