Taxonomy of some Galeommatoidea (Mollusca, Bivalvia) associated with deep-sea echinoids: A reassessment of the bivalve genera Axinodon Verrill & Bush, 1898 and Kelliola Dall, 1899 with descriptions of new genera Syssitomya gen. nov. and Ptilomyax gen. nov.
Author
Oliver, P. Graham
text
European Journal of Taxonomy
2012
2012-04-25
12
1
24
journal article
21841
10.5852/ejt.2012.12
5217c4a1-a0dd-478e-bd0c-95df35bad69b
2118-9773
3857751
Axinodon ellipticus
Verrill & Bush, 1898
Axinodon ellipticus
Verrill & Bush, 1898: 796
, pl. XC figs 5, 6; pl. XCII, fig. 1.
Axinodon symmetros
–
Aartsen 1996: 30
, fig. 5.
Material examined
Holotype
1
shell,
North Atlantic
, off
New Jersey
,
United States
Fish Commission
Albatross
, stn 2096,
39˚22'20"N
70˚52'20"W
, 1451 fathoms (
2864 m
), United States National Museum-
USNM35175
.
Redescription of
holotype
(
Fig. 1
)
Shell small, length
3.5 mm
, height
3.3 mm
. Thin, fragile. Equivalve. Inequilateral, beaks behind the midline. Umbos prominent, beaks prosogyrate. Outline obliquely subcircular, distinctly expanded anteriorly; anterior dorsal margin short, as a poorly defined lunule; posterior dorsal margin indistinct sloping into broadly rounded posterior, anterior broadly rounded more so than posterior, ventral margin broadly rounded no distinct junctions with lateral margins. Sculpture of dense, fine commarginal ridges most obvious on margins. Prodissoconch II distinct,
754 µm
across, with weak commarginal lines (
Fig. 1H
). Hinge plate narrow, ligament deeply sunken on a groove running from under the beaks posteriorly for about one-third of the posterior dorsal slope. Right valve lacking any projecting teeth, hinge plate slightly and irregularly thickened below lunule. Left valve with a short, weak. marginal flange beneath the lunule; a very weak protuberance is visible below the beak. Adductor scars oval, roughly of equal size; pallial line entire. Interior with feeble radial striae.
Differential diagnosis
At the generic level
Chavan (1969)
lists
Kelliola
Dall, 1899
as congeneric with
Axinodon
and assigns them to the
Galeommatoidea
in the family
Montacutidae
. This is despite
Verrill & Bush (1898)
describing
Axinodon
as edentulous and
Dall (1899)
describing
Kelliola
with teeth. The hinge of
A. ellipticus
has been examined carefully to ascertain if it is edentulous as stated by
Aartsen (1996)
or if a cardinal peg was present but has been broken off. The SEM images presented here (
Fig. 1A
) show no indication of a broken tooth confirming the edentulous condition. Comparisons with figures in
Chavan (1969)
should not be made as these incorrectly show a shell that is expanded posteriorly and teeth that are not shown in the accurate figures made by
Verrill & Bush (1898)
. From the description below,
Kelliola
is seen to have a cardinal peg in the right valve (
Fig. 2A
) and therefore
Axinodon
and
Kelliola
are not congeneric. In outline,
Axinodon
looks like
Kelliopsis
Verrill & Bush, 1898
but the latter has small, distinct teeth (
Verrill & Bush 1898
).
Verrill & Bush (1898)
placed
Axinodon
in the
Thyasiridae
as did
Aartsen (1996)
and
Coan
et al.
(2000)
, and there are similarities with the thyasirid genus
Mendicula
Iredale, 1924
. Without anatomical data, it is not possible to confirm the affinity with the
Thyasiridae
but it is, however, very doubtful that
Axinodon
is a galeommatid as the latter all display some degree of dentition in the right valve.