Bathyal Mollusca from the cold-water coral biotope of Santa Maria di Leuca (Apulian margin, southern Italy)
Author
Negri, Mauro Pietro
Author
Corselli, Cesare
text
Zootaxa
2016
4186
1
1
97
journal article
10.11646/zootaxa.4186.1.1
5b97cddd-5284-4a6b-8693-898864fb4711
1175-5326
165288
029B675F-776C-4CD6-9992-FA05AEADFA7B
Amphissa acutecostata
(
Philippi, 1844
)
Fig. 14
h–j
Fusus costulatus
Cantraine, 1835
(p. 393).
Buccinum
acute-costatum
Philippi, 1844
(p. 192, pl. 27, fig. 14).
Columbella haliaeeti
Jeffreys, 1867
(p. 356: 1867; pl. 88, fig. 3: 1869).
Anachis costulata
(Cantraine)
auct.
var.
albula
Jeffreys—Dautzenberg &
Fischer 1896
(p. 436).
Amphissa haliaeeti
(
Jeffreys, 1867
)
—
Fretter & Graham 1984
(p. 462, fig. 321).
Amphissa acutecostata
(
Philippi, 1844
)
—
Bouchet & Warén 1985
(p. 165, figs. 392, 395–398);
Poppe &
Goto
1991
(p. 150, pl. 30, fig. 24);
Beck
et al.
2006
(p. 80, top fig.).
Amphissa acutecostata
(
Phil., 1844
)
—
Sabelli & Spada 1986
(p. 2, fig. 8).
Amphissa acutocostata
(
Philippi, 1844
)
—
Giannuzzi-Savelli
et al.
2003
(p. 242, fig. 560);
Repetto
et al.
2005
(p. 193, top left fig.).
Amphissa acutecostata
(Philippi)
—
Di Geronimo
et al.
2005
(fig. 3.4).
Diagnostic characters
. Ovately fusiform shell; narrowly oval aperture; lirations on the inner side of the outer lip; slightly flexuous thin axial ribs, 11–15 per whorl; dense spiral striae, stronger on base. Protoconch: conical; 3.5 whorls; diameter about 880 µm (protoconch I: 310 µm); height about 660 µm; first 1.4 whorls (protoconch I) with densely set zig-zag spirals; subsequent whorls (protoconch II) with zig-zag spirals adapically and irregular axial bars abapically; transition to the teleoconch marked by an opisthocyrt lip.
Remarks
. Some of the Santa Maria di Leuca specimens are heavily worn and altered and presumably of Pleistocene age. They bear more and more sinuous axial ribs. According to CLEMAM (2016),
A. acutecostata
has a number of synonyms, amongst them
Amphissa haliaeeti
(
Jeffreys, 1867
)
and
Amphissa costulata
(
Cantraine, 1835
, originally designated as
Fusus costulatus
, a name predated by
F. costulatus
Lamarck, 1822
).
Occurrence
. Box-corer samples BC70 (1 specimen), BC72 (2); core BC05 (1). Maximum height:
7 mm
.
Distribution and habitat
.
Amphissa acutecostata
is widely distributed on both sides of the northern Atlantic, from
New
Jersey
to
North Carolina
and from
Norway
to southern
Morocco
, the
Canaries
, the
Azores
and the Mediterranean; it dwells on sandy and muddy bottoms in the
150–2800 m
depth interval (
Fretter & Graham 1984
;
Bouchet & Warén 1985
;
Poppe &
Goto
1991
;
Pons-Moyà & Pons 1999
;
Olabarria 2006
).
FIGURE 14. a–c
:
Pagodula
echinata
(Kiener, 1840)
, sample BC72, scale bars: 5 mm (a), 0.5 mm (b–c, protoconch);
d–g
:
Nassarius
lima
(Dillwyn, 1817)
, sample BC72, scale bars: 5 mm (d), 1 mm (e, juvenile), 0.5 mm (f–g, protoconch);
h–j
:
Amphissa
acutecostata
(Philippi, 1844)
, sample BC72, scale bars: 2 mm (h), 0.5 mm (i–j, protoconch);
k–m
:
Fusinus
rostratus
(Olivi, 1792)
, sample BC72, scale bars: 5 mm (k), 0.5 mm (l–m, protoconch);
n–p
:
Drilliola
emendata
(Monterosato, 1872)
, sample BC67, scale bars: 2 mm (n), 0.5 mm (o–p, protoconch).
Fossil record.
Pliocene of
Northern
Italy
;
Pleistocene of southern
Italy
(
Bouchet & Warén 1985
;
Di Geronimo
&
La Perna
1997;
Di Geronimo
et al.
2005
;
Tabanelli 2008
).
Amphissa acutecostata
was originally described on Pleistocene material from
Calabria
,
Amphissa costulata
on Tertiary material from
Sicily
.