Succinea concordialis

[4] Succinea concordialis was originally discovered and described by Augustus Addison Gould in Latin language in 1848.

Testâ tenui, lucidâ, obliquè ovatâ, acuminatâ, reflexâ, cereâ et ad apicem rubicundâ, leviter striatâ et lineis obscuris volventibus insculptâ; anfr.

3 perobliquis, supernis parvulis, tumidis, suturâ profunda; aperturâ ovatâ, trientes duæ longitudinis testæ æquante, basi rotundatâ; columellâ arcuatâ, absque plicâ, leviter arrectâ; intus micante.

Its color and texture are like S. amphibia, from which it differs chiefly in the slight upturning of the edge of the columellar lip,

the presence of the obscure revolving lines and the ruddy apex.This species occurs in the US, in these States:[5] Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Illinois, Iowa,[6][7] Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas and Wisconsin.