New species of land snails (Mollusca: Gastropoda) from two isolated karst formations in central western Madagascar: Tsingy Beanka and Antsingimavo, with additional notes on other regional endemics
Author
Griffiths, O. L.
Research associate of the Australian Museum, Sydney, Australia and Biodiversity Conservation Madagascar (BCM) Ltd, Rivière des Anguilles, Mauritius
owen@bcm.intnet.mu
Author
Herbert, D. G.
KwaZulu-Natal Museum, P. Bag 9070, Pietermaritzburg, 3200 South Africa and School of Life Sciences, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Pietermaritzburg, 3206 South Africa
dherbert@nmsa.org.za
text
African Invertebrates
2013
2013-02-13
54
1
1
48
journal article
54828
10.5733/afin.054.0101
753510a6-cffa-4637-a1bd-e9ae7d5d1660
2305-2562
7670100
3795B466-1227-4BED-AD8A-DC88CA3E14E1
Tropidophora secunda
Fischer-Piette & Bedoucha, 1965
Figs 7
,
8
,
25C
Cyclostoma reticulatum
:
Reeve 1861
: pl. 9, fig. 48a, b [
non
Adams & Reeve
1850 in
1848–1850: 57, pl. 14, fig. 8].
Tropidophora reticulata
: Fischer-Piette 1949: 36
.
Tropidophora secunda
:
Fischer-Piette & Bedoucha 1965: 76
.
Type
loc.:
Madagascar
.
Tropidophora (Ligatella) secunda
: Fischer-Piette
et al
. 1993: 129
, fig. 82.
Morphological notes:
External features
(
Fig. 25C
): Head-foot more or less uniformly grey; tentacles and forehead slightly darker, paler toward mantle cavity; tip of snout conspicuously indented in mid-line; skin texture very finely granular.
Operculum
: Oligospiral; exterior portion a calcareous disc, attached to an inner and slightly larger corneous layer; external surface very shallowly concave, lacking a distinct convex spiral ridge (cf.
T. humbug
above), but with a diffuse, dark purple-brown spiral band more or less at mid-whorl, most noticeable on last whorl; edge of disc concave, with relatively weakly developed transverse partitions (adjacent to inner surface), except along smooth growing margin.
Radula
(
Fig. 8
): Formula 1+2+1+2+1; length
7.3 mm
,
ca
42 rows/mm; dentition fine. Rachidian with five distinct cusps, a minute additional pair sometimes discernable; central cusp largest and rounded, the outer pair small and curving inward. Inner laterals with four cusps, the inner cusp small and often obscured by the much larger second cusp; outer lateral with five or six cusps, the central three or four usually larger. Marginal teeth broad, the edge comprising three regions; an inner coarsely dentate element with
ca
9 denticles; a more finely denticulate central region, and a smooth outer portion. Such a radula conforms to the pattern seen in
Tropidophora (Ligatella)
Martens, 1880
(Fischer-Piette
et al
. 1969).
Fig. 7.
Tropidophora secunda
Fischer-Piette & Bedoucha, 1965
: (A–C)
Tsingy Beanka
, st’n 03/06, max. diameter 21.5 mm, NMSA L7040; (D)
Tsingy Beanka
, st’n 03/06, subadult, max. diameter 20.0 mm, NMSA L7040; (E) Kelifely Plateau, max. diameter 18.8 mm, NMSA L6798; (F–H) holotype (faded), ‘Madagascar’, Cuming collection, max. diameter 22.0 mm, NHMUK 20110470.
Locality data:
Tsingy Beanka
: st’ns 03/06, 11/06, 12/06, 13/06, 14/06, 15/06, 17/06, 18/06, 02/09, 11/09, R01/10, 03/10, 09/10.
Kelifely Plateau
: st’ns 04/05, 10/05.
Anjajavy (Narinda north)
: st’ns 33/03, 36/03. 37/03, 38/03, 39/03, 40/03, 13/04 [abundant in this area].
Mtn d’Ambre/Ankarana
: st’ns 12b/94, 01/01, 09/01 [uncommon].
Distribution: Central western to north-eastern
Madagascar
; from the southern Bemaraha region (Fischer-Piette
et al
. 1993) through
Tsingy Beanka
, the Kelifely Plateau and Anjajavy area, to Mtn d’Ambre and Ankarana in
Antsiranana Province
. Curiously, we have not found this species in our own surveys in the Tsingy de Bemaraha, nor at Antsingimavo, and whereas it is common in the southern
Tsingy Beanka
, it is rare in the central portion. Evidently although relatively widespread, the species has a somewhat patchy distribution within its range.
Habitat: Dry deciduous, evergreen and riverine forest in limestone areas; in leaf-litter and sheltering microhabitats amongst rocks.
Remarks: A characteristic species on account of its bold colour pattern.
T. reticulata
(Adams & Reeve, 1850)
, with which it was at one time confused, has a similar coloration, but is smaller (max. diameter approx.
16 mm
, compared to>
18.5 mm
in
T. secunda
), has a more elevated shell and a narrower umbilicus (Fischer-Piette 1949) (
Fig. 26G–I
,
syntype
, NHMUK). The white markings of
T. secunda
are not part of the shell fabric, but are a superficial chalky deposit which can be easily scraped off. Although previously reported from few localities, the range of
T. secunda
is evidently relatively large and it is not uncommon in undisturbed dry forest habitat. In contrast, the range of
T. reticulata
has yet to be established more precisely than ‘Madagascar’. Most specimens from
Tsingy Beanka
have a lower spire than the
holotype
(compare
Figs 7A and 7F
); however, shells of intermediate height are present both in the
Tsingy Beanka
and Kelifely Plateau (
Fig. 5D, E
).
Fig. 8.
Tropidophora secunda
Fischer-Piette & Bedoucha, 1965
, radula, NMSA L7040: (A) entire width of radula, scale bar = 200 μm; (B) rachidian and inner lateral teeth, scale bar = 50 μm; (C) outer lateral and marginal teeth, scale bar = 50 μm.
Fischer-Piette and Bedoucha (1965) selected as the ‘type’ for this species the specimen illustrated as
Cyclostoma reticulatum
by
Reeve (1861
: pl. 9, fig. 48a, b, ‘Mus. Cuming’), which they stated was present in the ‘British Museum’ [NHMUK]. Fischer-Piette (1949) had earlier examined this specimen, citing its diameter as
22 mm
. No specimen identified as the
holotype
of
Tropidophora secunda
was present in the NHMUK, but a specimen labelled
Cyclostoma reticulatum
is present in the Cuming collection (Ablett pers. comm.
Nov. 2011
). This is
22 mm
in diameter and closely resembles the figure given by
Reeve (1861)
, though the colour pattern is not a perfect match. It seems very probable that this is the specimen referred to by Fischer-Piette and Bedoucha (1965), and we consider it to be the
holotype
of
Tropidophora secunda
(NHMUK 20110470,
Fig. 7F–H
). It is not clear why Fischer-Piette, after having examined the Cuming specimen illustrated by
Reeve (1861)
and designated it to be the type, subsequently stated for
T. secunda
‘localisation du type:?’ (Fischer-Piette
et al
. 1993).