The auger snails (Gastropoda, Conoidea, Terebridae) of the Miocene Paratethys Sea
Author
Harzhauser, Mathias
0000-0002-4471-6655
Natural History Museum Vienna, Burgring 7, 1010 Vienna, Austria mathias. harzhauser @ nhm-wien. ac. at; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4471 - 6655
mathias.harzhauser@nhm-wien.ac.at
Author
Landau, Bernard M.
0000-0002-4471-6655
Natural History Museum Vienna, Burgring 7, 1010 Vienna, Austria mathias. harzhauser @ nhm-wien. ac. at; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4471 - 6655 & Naturalis Biodiversity Center, P. O. Box 9517, 2300 RA Leiden, Netherlands; Instituto Dom Luiz da Universidade de Lisboa, Campo Grande, 1749 - 016 Lisboa, Portugal; and International Health Centres, Av. Infante de Henrique 7, Areias São João, P- 8200 Albufeira, Portugal bernardmlandau @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 7768 - 8494 & Natural History Museum Vienna, Burgring 7, 1010 Vienna, Austria mathias. harzhauser @ nhm-wien. ac. at; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4471 - 6655
mathias.harzhauser@nhm-wien.ac.at
text
Zootaxa
2023
2023-12-14
5385
1
1
70
https://mapress.com/zt/article/download/zootaxa.5385.1.1/52480
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.5385.1.1
1175-5334
10376252
7FBEC9FB-E31E-4CA4-8BD0-BE6D35322C3E
Hastula translata
(Sacco, 1891)
Figs 3D
,
8A–B
Terebra striata
Bast.
—
Hilber 1879: 421
, pl. 1, figs 4a–c.
Terebra
(
Hastula
)
striata
Bast.
—
Hoernes & Auinger 1880: 110
, pl. 12, figs 21a–c.
*
[
Terebrum
(
Hastula
)
algarbiorum
] var.
translata
Sacc.
—
Sacco 1891a: 56
[
pro.
Terebra
(
Hastula
)
striata
sensu
Hoernes & Auinger 1880
: pl. 12, figs 21a–c].
Type material.
Holotype
,
NHMW 2023
/0301/0001, SL:
11.6 mm
, MD:
3.1 mm
,
Pöls
(
Austria
), illustrated in
Hoernes & Auinger (1880
: pl. 12, figs 21a–c),
Figs 3D
,
8A
1
–A
2
.
Illustrated material.
NHMW
2023/0301/0002, SL:
9.9 mm
, MD: 3.0 mm, Pöls (
Austria
), illustrated in
Hilber
(1879: pl. 1, figs 4a–c),
Figs 8B
1
–B
2
. No additional material is available.
Revised description.
Small, moderately slender shell of up to nine teleoconch whorls with slightly cyrtoconoid spire profile; apical angle ~26°, decreasing to ~10° on late teleoconch whorls. Protoconch high conical of about 3 convex whorls. Early teleoconch whorls conical, with prominent, slightly opisthocline axial ribs, separated by narrower interspaces. No subsutural band. Later teleoconch whorls subcylindrical with narrowly incised suture, faintly gradate profile. Abapically, ribs narrow mid-whorl and become obsolete or almost so, reappearing faintly and broader again just above suture. Last whorl subcylindrical, high, ~42% of total height with rounded basal angulation.
Axial ribs strengthening over basal angulation. Base weakly contracting. Fasciole broad, flat, delimited by low carina. Aperture narrow. Columella twisted, weakly excavated in adapical half. No columellar fold. Columellar callus forming thin, broad rim, poorly delimited from base. Anal canal narrowly incised. Outer lip thin. Siphonal canal short, wide, shallowly notched.
FIGURE 8.
Hastula translata
(Sacco, 1891)
.
A
1
–A
2
.
Holotype, NHMW 2023/0301/0001, Pöls (Austria).
B
1
–B
2
.
NHMW 2023/0301/0002, Pöls (Austria).
Discussion.
Sacco (1891a)
established this species as ‘variety’ of the Tortonian
Hastula algarbiorum
(Pereira da Costa, 1867). This species differs mainly in its slightly more gradate spire and especially the specimens illustrated by
Davoli (1977)
display a strongly reduced axial sculpture and are thick-shelled (see Pereira da Costa, 1867: 13, figs 11–12;
Sacco 1891a
: pl. 2, figs 56–60;
Davoli 1977
: pl. 1, figs 4–5, 17–18). More specimens of
Hastula translata
would be needed to evaluate if these fall within the range of variability of
H. algarbiorum
.
Hastula translata
was confused by
Hilber (1879)
and
Hoernes & Auinger (1880)
with
Hastula striata
(de
Basterot, 1825
)
, from the Burdigalian of
France
. The Paratethyan species differs from
H. striata
in the distinctly less slender outline of its shell, lower spire, and weaker axial ribs at the abapical suture (see
Peyrot 1931
: pl. 10, figs 49–50;
Glibert 1952a
: pl. 14, fig. 1a).
Bałuk (1997)
treated the
holotype
of this species as
Hastula cinereides
(
Hoernes & Auinger, 1880
)
[=
Hastula duboisiana
(d’Orbigny, 1852)
], but
Hastula translata
differs from
H. cinereides
in a much smaller size, slenderer shell (at same growth stage) and more prominent axial ribs.
Hastula hungarica
Csepreghy-Meznerics, 1954
has similar sculpture but is much more obese and has a higher last whorl.
Paleoenvironment.
Coastal marine, inner neritic paleoenvironments of a protected embayment.
Distribution in Central Paratethys.
Badenian (Middle Miocene):
Styrian Basin
: Pöls (
Austria
) (
Hoernes & Auinger 1880
).
Genus
Hastulopsis
Oyama, 1961
Type
species.
Terebra melanacme
E.A.
Smith, 1875
; original designation by
Oyama (1961: 161)
. Present-day,
Japan
.
Revised diagnosis.
“
Shell small to medium-sized (to
60 mm
), shiny, faintly axially ribbed, with numerous fine spiral incisions. Subsutural band generally not spirally decorated, bordered by relatively deep incision
.” (
Fedosov
et al.
2020: 379
, see also
Terryn 2007
).
Discussion.
In the European Neogene there exists a group of species with medium-sized shells characterized by a weak to subobsolete subsutural band and a change in axial sculpture during ontogeny, starting with prominent axial ribs on early teleoconch whorls, which are replaced by weak ribs or folds or become entirely subobsolete on last teleoconch whorls. This group comprises
‘Terebra’
excostellata
Sacco, 1891a
,
‘Terebra’
exilis
Bell, 1871
,
‘Terebra’
fuchsii
(
Hoernes, 1875
)
,
‘Terebra’
hoernesi
Beyrich, 1854
,
‘Terebra’
pedemontana
Sacco, 1891
, and
‘Terebra’
striatellata
(Sacco, 1891)
. These species have variously been placed in
Hastula
,
Terebra
and
Strioterebrum
in the literature (
e.g.
,
Sieber 1958
;
Wienrich 2006
;
Ceulemans
et al.
2018
). The general shell shape, however, differs clearly from the slender, multi-whorled
Terebra
(as defined by
Fedosov
et al.
2020
). The group lacks the wide basal lip of
Hastula
and differs from that genus in the longer, narrower siphonal canal.
Strioterebrum
has a distinct subsutural band, delimited by a spiral grove and its siphonal canal is less twisted. In contrast, these species are morphologically very similar to living species of
Hastulopsis
, such as
Hastulopsis blanda
(
Deshayes, 1859
)
,
H. gotoensis
(E.A.
Smith, 1879
)
,
H. masirahensis
Terryn & Rosado, 2016
,
H. melanacme
(E.A.
Smith, 1875
)
, and
H. mirbatensis
Terryn & Rosado, 2016
.
Hastulopsis suspensa
(E.A.
Smith, 1904
)
differs from that group by the presence of delicate spiral threads but is otherwise also very similar. Therefore, we propose to place these Neogene European species in
Hastulopsis
, which has not been recorded so far from the Neogene of the Circum-Mediterranean
Region
. These Neogene European species are also reminiscent of the pervicaciine genus
Partecosta
Dance & Eames, 1966
[
type
species
Strioterebrum wilkinsi
Dance & Eames, 1966
(=
Terebra fuscobasis
E.A.
Smith, 1877
)]. That genus also has predominant axial sculpture and lacks a distinct subsutural band but differs from
Hastulopsis
in its short and wide siphonal canal and the wide, convex basal outer lip.
All species currently placed in
Hastulopsis
by
Fedosov
et al.
(2020)
occur in the Indo-West Pacific.