Contributions to the knowledge of the Eratoidae. X. Revision of the genus Archierato Schilder, 1933 (Mollusca: Gastropoda)
Author
Fehse, Dirk
0000-0002-4053-2146
Zoological State Collection Munich (ZSM), Departement Mollusca, Muenchhausenstrasse 21, 81247 Muenchen, Germany. triviidae @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 4053 - 2146
triviidae@gmail.com
Author
Simone, Luiz Ricardo L.
0000-0002-1397-9823
Luiz Ricardo L. Simone, Museu de Zoologia da Universidade de São Paulo, Cx. Postal 42391, 04218 - 970, São Paulo, SP, Brazil. lrsimone @ usp. br, lrlsimone @ gmail. com; https: // orcid. org / 0000 - 0002 - 1397 - 9823
lrlsimone@gmail.com
text
Zootaxa
2020
2020-09-09
4851
1
81
110
journal article
8577
10.11646/zootaxa.4851.1.3
7cbff168-82f5-4432-a4ea-c1e8d731d3c3
1175-5326
4407214
A9C94FB4-6A22-4477-9B5A-471345D0D2F2
Archierato martinicensis
(
Schilder, 1933
)
comb. nov.
(
Figs. 21, 22
,
24–26
,
39
)
Erato maugeriae:
Matthews & Matthews, 1976: 76
, text fig. 6 (non Gray
in
Sowerby, 1832
).
Erato maugeriae:
Sowerby, 1859
: fig. 8;
Tryon, 1883: 9
(pl. 4, figs. 42, 43);
Daccarett & Bossio, 2011: 85
, 244, fig. 347 (non Gray
in
Sowerby I, 1832).
Erato maugeriae
Reeve, 1865
: fig. 10 [preoccupied by Gray
in
Sowerby I, 1832].
Hespererato maugeriae martinicensis
Schilder, 1933: 249
, 254, 267 (fig. 45);
Allan, 1956: 144
.
Erato
(
Hespererato
)
maugeriae:
Warmke & Abbott, 1961: 90
(pl. 23, fig. c) (non Gray
in
Sowerby I, 1832).
Hespererato martinicensis:
Cate, 1977: 361
(figs. 43, 43a);
Fehse & Landau, 2002: 100
, text figs. 5.
Hespererato maugeriae
:
Redfern, 2001: 54
, pl. 27, fig. 231;
Simone, 2004: 122
(figs. 44, 100, 415−427) (non Gray
in
Sowerby I, 1832).
Holotype
.
NMW
.1955.158.01218;
Melvill-Tomlin
coll., ex leg.
H.B. Preston.
L
4.5 mm
, W
2.7 mm
, CT 12, LT 15.
Type locality.
Martinique
, Lesser Antilles.
Etymology.
Named after the
type
locality.
Original description
(
Schilder 1933: 267
). “
martinicensis
, nov.,
Hespererato
. Closely allied to
maugeriae
, but usually smaller, labral teeth more close and numerous, spire distinctly tinged with yellow to reddish, anterior extremity tinged with green to pink of a deeper hue than the dorsum; …
Type
from
Martinique
(coll. Tomlin …) ...”
Diagnosis.
Shell mid-sized with length
4 to 5 mm
, robust, sub-triangular, with slightly distant, coarse, obscured labral and irregular, less developed columellar dentition; ventral fold thickened, 15 labral and 12 columellar teeth; maximum globosity at posterior third.
Description.
Shell mid-sized, sub-triangular, with elevated spire. Protoconch and subsequent whorls covered by thin callus. Suture slightly indistinct. Body whorl ~90% of total height, maximum diameter at posterior third, convexly tapered anteriorly. Anterior ventral margin indented. Dorsum rounded. Dorsal sulcus absent. Whole shell surface covered by very thin, sub-glossy callus. Aperture comprises ~85% of total height, straight and narrow. Labrum narrow, thickened, smooth, rounded ventrally. Outer labral margin rounded, callused, roundly edged at inner margin. Labral teeth coarse, less developed, slightly distant,
15 in
number, restricted to labral edge. Siphonal canal short, narrowed, rounded, slightly protruded. Anal canal simple, blunt. Columella almost straight, curved without inner carinal ridge and slightly developed parietal lip. Columellar denticles
12 in
number, irregular, somewhat obscured, spaced, anterior most forming terminal ridge, posterior most enlarged, projecting. Fossula obscured, not delimited from the columella. Callosities white; dorsum, tips of canals and protoconch and first whorls pale greybrown.
Variability.
This pale taxon with its narrow labrum and simple shell outline is quite distinctive because of the uniform shell morphology. Only the inflation of the shells and the elevation of the spire varies slightly as usual.
Distribution.
Florida
,
U.S.A.
to
Venezuela
. ‘
Martinique Island
, Lesser Antilles, Windward Islands …’ (
Cate, 1977: 361
); ‘North Carolina; … Georgia …’ (
Simone, 2004: 125
).
Examined material.
U.S.A.:
Pompano Beach, E
Florida
(
DFB 5862
).
Guadeloupe
:
MNHN
,
loc. GD04,
Grand Cul-de-Sac Marin
,
16°23.2’N
,
061°32.4’W
,
Guadeloupe
, dredged
70 m
;
MNHN
,
loc. GS31, face
Ilet Fajou
,
Grand Cul-de-Sac Marin
,
16°21.6’N
,
61°34.7’W
,
Guadeloupe
, dredged
29 m
.
MNHN
,
loc. GD04 (
MNHN
IM-2012-4218
), GS31 (
MNHN
IM-2012-4231
). E
Honduras
:
Guanajas
,
Roatan
(
DFB 5863
). E
Panama
:
Bocas del Toro
,
Gulf of Mosquito
(
DFB 7626
).
Venezuela
:
Maiquetía
,
Federal District
(
DFB 7628
)
.
Remarks.
Tryon (1883: 9
, pl. 4, fig. 42, 43) showed a specimen from the “West Indies”. He mentioned ‘gray or livid’ as shell coloration. Therefore, it seemingly is
Archierato martinicensis
because
Archierato maugeriae
is more colorful.
Schilder’s (1933: 267)
description indicates a really colorful species—“spire distinctly tinged with yellow to reddish, anterior extremity tinged with green to pink of a deeper hue than the dorsum”. However, the
holotype
is a very pale specimen. Schilder’s mistake possibly is caused because he has not examined the type specimen of
A. maugeriae
nor the
holotype
of his own species. Schilder distinguished
A. martinicensis
from
A. maugeriae
and wrote, “…but usually smaller, labral teeth closer and numerous …” All these features are inappropriate in distinguishing both species, but
A. martinicensis
is easily distinguishable from the other Caribbean species by the sub-triangular instead rhombic shell outline, the pale colored shell, straight aperture, rounded dorsum, the narrower labrum and the protruded anterior terminal tip (compare text fig. 4).
Simone (2004: 122
, figs. 44, 100, 415–427) examined a shell from off
North Carolina
,
32°49’30”N
,
78°39’48”W
,
U.S.A.
,
USNM 850687
, collected at
34 m
, that generally resembles
A. martinicensis
but differs by the pointed apex and the developed labral denticles
.