Fasciolariidae (Gastropoda: Neogastropoda) of French Guiana and nearby regions, with descriptions of two new species and comments on marine zoogeography of northeastern South America
Author
Lyons, William G.
Author
Snyder, Martin Avery
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-04-12
4585
2
239
268
journal article
27328
10.11646/zootaxa.4585.2.2
0d5b0561-a16b-4ed8-a9e8-2b7160630339
1175-5326
2637300
882D13C5-D921-43B3-9847-4B3925EBB671
Aurantilaria aurantiaca
(
Lamarck, 1816
)
(
Figures 3–4
)
Fasciolaria aurantiaca
Lamarck, 1816
: 7
, pl. 430, figs. 1a, b;
Kobelt, 1874
: 59
; Kobelt
in
Küster &
Kobelt, 1876
: 142
–144, pl. 29, figs. 1–5;
Dall, 1897
: 122
;
Dall, 1901
: 143
; Lange de
Morretes, 1949
: 99
;
Fausto-Filho
et al
., 1966
: 127
, 129;
Matthews & Rios, 1967
: 70
;
Kempf & Matthews, 1968
: 93
;
Matthews, 1968
: 248
;
Furtado-Ogawa, 1970
: 194
, 195;
Rios, 1970
: 95
, 96, pl. 28, figs.;
Testud, 1974
: 211
, 223;
Matthews
et al
., 1977
: 19
; de
Oliveira
et al.
, 1981
: 218
; Matthews- Cascon
et al.
, 1989: 357–361, figs. 1a–c, 2a–c, 5a–c, 7a–c;
Snyder, 2003
: 46
;
Finet & Snyder, 2012
: 2
, 3, 18, figs. 1A-C (
3 syntypes
figured).
Fasciolaria (Pleuroploca) aurantiaca
:
Rutsch, 1934
: 74
.
Fasciolaria (Fasciolaria) aurantiaca
:
Rios, 1975
: 102
, 103, pl. 29, fig. 432.
Pleuroploca aurantiaca
:
Khomasurya, 1980
: 1
, fig. 1;
Rios, 1985
: 106
, pl. 36, fig. 466;
Sutty, 1986
: 64
, 68, 69, pl. 75;
Calvo, 1987
: 149
–151, 176, 200, fig. 122;
Petuch, 1987
: 140
; Mello & M. de
L. Costa, 1994
: 56
, 61, fig. 3a;
Rios, 1994
: 132
, pl. 42, fig. 565;
Coltro & Coltro, 1997
: 17
;
Mallard & Robin, 2005
: 8
, pl. 6;
Pisor, 2005
: 62
;
Robin, 2008
: 207
, figs. 11;
Massemin
et al.
, 2009
: 153
, 156, 157, figs.;
Rios, 2009
: 249
, figs.;
Petuch, 2013
: 24
, 187, fig. 2.7 D.
Aurantilaria auriantiaca
:
Snyder
et al
., 2012
: 42
, 44, 46, 59;
Mallard & Robin, 2017
: 188
–190, figs. 1–7.
Types.
3 probable
syntypes
, 99.5, 62.7 & 42.0 mm, locality on label “?
Australie
ou Amérique Centrale,” MHNG INVE 51699 (
Finet & Snyder 2012: 2, 18, fig. 1A
–
C
).
Material examined.
French Guiana
—1-dd, 116.0 mm (IM-2012-20357), GUYANE sta. SR-23 (Île Saint Joseph),
05°16.8’N
,
52°34.9’W
,
6–10 m
, 0
4 Oct 2014
; 1-dd,
131.9 mm
, G0 sta. 16,
05°10.7’N
,
51°03.8’W
,
80–82 m
,
19 Apr. 1999
.
St. Vincent-Grenadines—
1-lv,
133.9 mm
,
Savan Island
,
18.3 m
, LC.
Grenada
—1-lv, 60.0 mm,
Hog Island
,
1 m
, LC; 1-dd,
85.1 mm
,
South Hog Island
,
1.6 m
, LC; 1-dd,
112.6 mm
, “Grenada,” LC
.
Brazil
—1-lv,
143.5 mm
, off Bragança, Pará,
40–80 m
, LC; 3-lv,
135.2–157.8 mm
, 2-dd, 136.8 and
135.5 mm
, off Belém, Pará,
30–40 m
, LC; also
64 specimens
lv and dd,
27.9–136.8 mm
, from
Amapá
,
Pará
,
Maranhão
,
Ceará
,
Pernambuco
,
Alagoas
,
Bahía
,
Espirito Santo
and
Rio de Janeiro
, all
ANSP
and
136 specimens
lv and dd,
9.7–211.1 mm
, from
Maranhão
,
Ceará
,
Rio Grande do Norte
,
Pernambuco
,
Alagoas
,
Bahía
and
Espírito Santo
, all LC
.
Remarks.
This species was known as
Fasciolaria aurantiaca
or
Pleuroploca aurantiaca
until designated as
type
species of
Aurantilaria
by
Snyder
et al
. (2012)
.
Finet and Snyder (2012: fig. 1A–C)
identified and figured as probable
syntypes
three specimens in the Lamarck collection at Geneva (MHNG INVE 51699). The two larger specimens (99.5 and
62.7 mm
; fig. 1A, B) are of the species now known as
A. aurantiaca
, but the smallest specimen (42.0 mm; fig. 1C) is a juvenile shell of the Indo-West Pacific species
Pleuroploca trapezium
(
Linnaeus, 1758
)
.
Two specimens of
Aurantilaria aurantiaca
are contained in MNHN collections from
French Guiana
: a worn 116.0 mm shell from off Île Saint Joseph, depth of
6–10 m
, and a
131.9 mm
shell trawled dead from
80 m
.
The shell from Île Saint Joseph might have originated elsewhere, perhaps trawled offshore and later discarded, as bottom
type
in such shallows in the Guianas does not seem suitable for
A. aurantiaca
(see Discussion). The only other records from the Guianas are of two specimens from “French
Guyana
” figured by
Mallard and Robin (2005
;
2017
);
Massemin
et al
. (2009)
also reported two specimens from
Guyane
, but that report may be a repetition; the shell they figured was also figured by Mallard and Robin.
Although well-known in nineteenth century literature, authors mistakenly treated this taxon as an Old World species until its presence in
Alagoas
,
Brazil
was established by
Kobelt (1874)
and Kobelt
in
Küster and
Kobelt (1876)
, soon to be confirmed by reports from
Bahía
and
Pernambuco
by
Dall (1897
;
1901
). Lange de
Morretes (1949)
provided another report from
Bahía
, and several reports of the species in
Ceará
followed (e.g.
Matthews & Rios 1967
).
Fausto-Filho
et al
. (1966)
cited
F. aurantiaca
among the most characteristic mollusks at lobster banks off
Ceará
;
Matthews (1968)
documented young
F
.
aurantiaca
in stomachs of fish,
Amphichthys cryptocentrus
, from depths of
22–37 m
off Fortaleza,
Ceará
;
Furtado-Ogawa (1970)
reported the incidence of juvenile
F
.
aurantiaca
in the lower intertidal zone of coastal hard substrate near Fortaleza; and
Calvo (1987)
noted its intertidal occurrence in
Bahía
.
Reports of
Aurantilaria aurantiaca
from northern
Brazil
(
Amapá
, Pará and
Maranhão
to
Espírito Santo
) are numerous (e.g.
Kempf & Matthews 1968
;
Testud 1974
;
Matthews
et al
. 1977
; de
Oliveira
et al.
1981
; Matthews- Cascon
et al.
1989;
Mello & Costa 1994
), and the species is also known from the Abrolhos Archipelago (
Petuch 1987
).
Aurantilaria aurantiaca
was considered endemic to
Brazil
until
Khomasurya (1980)
documented occurrences at Carriacou and
Grenada
in the Lesser Antilles. Soon thereafter,
Sutty (1986)
reported specimens from
St. Vincent
, confirming the species’ occurrence in the southern Lesser Antilles, for which we provide additional records.
Mallard and Robin (2005
: pl. 6; 2017: 189, 190, figs. 2, 4) and
Robin (2008: 207, fig. 11)
labeled figured specimens as being from “Gulf of
Mexico
” and “
Honduras
,” but we consider those records doubtful. A map by
Mallard and Robin (2017: 189)
depicting a continuous range from northeastern
Brazil
through the western Caribbean to the southwestern Gulf of
Mexico
is similarly incorrect. We know of no credible records of
A. aurantiaca
from the Caribbean coasts of South and Central America or anywhere else north or west of the Lesser Antilles.
Massemin
et al
. (2009)
characterized
A. aurantiaca
as rarely trawled in
French Guiana
and, apparently unaware of records from the Lesser Antilles, proposed that the species was at the northern limit of its range there. Likewise, we found no record of
A
.
aurantiaca
from
Suriname
or
Guyana
. Scarcity of the species in the Guianas may reflect scarcity of reefal habitat there.
Sutty (1986: 64)
reported that in
the Grenadines
the species is a reef dweller, favoring zones where currents are strong, waters clear and the fauna generally rich. Some other reports indicate an affinity for rocky bottoms and coral reefs (e.g.
Fausto-Filho
et al
. 1966
;
Rios 1975
;
Kaicher 1978
;
Coltro & Coltro 1997
), but the species also has been taken on sand bottoms. The Conquiliologistas do
Brasil
website reports the depth range of
A. aurantiaca
as
0–70 m
, slightly less than the
80 m
depth reported by
Kempf and Matthews (1968)
and confirmed herein.
Large sizes reported for
A
.
aurantiaca
include
150 mm
(
Khomasurya 1980
;
Matthews-Cascon 1989
), but the maximum size cited by the Coquiliologistas do
Brasil
website is
170 mm
and the “world record size” is
211 mm
(
Pisor 2005
).