On the taxonomic position of Phaenomenella Fraussen & Hadorn, 2006 (Neogastropoda, Buccinoidea) with description of two new species
Author
Kantor, Yuri
Author
Kosyan, Alisa
Author
Sorokin, Pavel
text
Zoosystema
2020
2020-02-04
42
3
33
55
journal article
24150
10.5252/zoosystema2020v42a3
7bdbb02c-ce5d-4df5-846a-b45c54fedc5a
3652791
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:27C94F0F-BB9B-40A3-B615-4DB19C94F042
Siphonalia pfefferi
G. B.
Sowerby III, 1900
(
Figs 9D, E
;
11C, D
;
12
)
Siphonalia pfefferi
G. B.
Sowerby III, 1900: 440
, pl. 11, fig. 3.
MATERIAL EXAMINED. —
Japan
• 1 lot,
2 specimens
; Off Hashima,
Miyazaki Prefecture
,
Kyushu
;
10.V.1996
(nos. 1, 2, figs 8D, E).
COMPLEMENT TO DESCRIPTION
Radula
Radula rather similar in both specimens (
Fig. 11C, D
); central tooth with rectangular basal part and weakly arcuate anterior margin and three medium long triangular broad cusps, central one equal in length but slightly narrower than lateral ones. Lateral teeth tricuspate with weakly curved basal side, attached to membrane. Outermost cusp recurved, medium long, inner cusp weakly recurved, about 2/3 of outer cusp length; inner cusp in right longitudinal row of specimen spm. no. 2 partially subdivided (
Fig. 11D
). Intermediate cusp shortest, situated closer to inner cusp; inner cusp of spm. no. 2 partially subdivided in left longitudinal row.
Anatomy (spm. no. 1, male,
Fig. 12
)
Head very short and broad, tentacles short, contracted, with small eyes at lobes. Foot contracted, propodium moderately wide, operculum oval with terminal nucleus. Penis rather large (
Fig. 12C
), flattened, with long narrow seminal papilla in deepening at the top. Mantle with medium long siphon.
Digestive system.
Proboscis partly everted out of rhynchodaeum, with contracted walls. Multiple proboscis retractors attaching mostly along right side of anterior oesophagus (
Fig. 12D, E
, prr), connecting rhynchodaeum and lateral walls of body haemocoel. Buccal mass slightly shorter than retracted proboscis (
Fig. 12F
, bm), attaching to its walls by multiple odontophoral retractors (odr). Radula lying in middle of buccal mass and attached to proboscis walls by median retractor (
Fig. 12F
, mrr). Salivary glands (
Fig. 12D, E
, sg) medium large (0.4 proboscis length), oval, with salivary ducts following on both sides of anterior oesophagus. Anterior oesophagus wide, dorso-ventrally flattened (
Fig. 12E
, aoe), valve of Leiblein rounded, medium large. Posterior oesophagus (poe) relatively narrow. Gland of Leiblein large, folded beneath nerve ring (
Fig. 12E
, gl). Stomach spanning about 0.3 whorl (
Fig. 12G
). Posterior mixing area not large (
Fig. 12G, H
, pma). Intestine medium wide. Opening of posterior duct of digestive gland located near oesophageal opening (
Fig. 12I
, pdg), opening of anterior duct located closer to beginning of intestine. Inner stomach wall between two openings contains longitudinal fold (
Fig. 12H
, lfl), lined with low oblique folds, rest part of inner and outer stomach wall lined with moderately high transverse folds.
Results of the phylogenetic analysis suggest close affinities of
Siphonalia
and
Phaenomenella
that remained unnoticed previously.
Fraussen & Hadorn (2006)
, while describing
Phaenomenella
, compared it to
Manaria
and
Eosipho
, but not to
Siphonalia
. The shell outline of some
Phaenomenella
(e.g.
Phaenomenella insulapratasensis
) is rather similar to
Siphonalia
: the shell is stout, with strongly convex whorls and a recurved siphonal canal. Species of
Phaenomenella
though have a much larger (about twice) protoconch in comparison with
Siphonalia
.
The intrageneric variability of shell shape in
Phaenomenella
in its current definition is very high (
Fraussen & Stahlschmidt 2013
) and in its extremes there is no resemblance between the two genera. It should also be born in mind that some of the most diverging species of
Phaenomenella
were not yet sequenced and may fall into other lineages.
Representatives of both genera are also anatomically similar, particularly in the digestive system characters. Both
Phaenomenella
and
Siphonalia
have a broad, medium long in the contracted state proboscis, medium large salivary glands and a large gland of Leiblein. It should be mentioned that despite these general similarities, there are no unique morphological characters uniting both genera. The radular morphology is very similar in both genera (
radula
of one more species,
S. marybethi
Parth, 1996
was illustrated in
Zhang & Zhang 2018
), however, as in the case with the body anatomy, it is of rather generalized buccinid appearance; similar radular morphology can be found in many unrelated genera – eg.
Latisipho
Dall, 1916 (
Kosyan 2006
)
,
Plicifusus
Dall, 1902
(
Kosyan & Kantor 2012
),
Aulacofusus
Dall, 1918
(
Kosyan & Kantor 2013
).
Our molecular analysis did not recover
Phaenomenella
as monophyletic. In both COI and combined COI+28S analyses the internal relationships within
Phaenomenella
–
Siphonalia
clade are not resolved.
Siphonalia spadicea
cluster without significant support with
P. samadiae
n. sp.
We have only a single species of
Siphonalia
in our analyses so it is too preliminary to change the classification on the basis of the incomplete dataset. Therefore we presently retain the validity of
Phaenomenella
, although it is possible that
Phaenomenella
and
Siphonalia
can belong to a single genus. One of the distinctions between the genera is the depth range of known species. Generally, species of
Siphonalia
dwell at shallower depths – from
10 to 300 m
(
Okutani 2000
), while
Phaenomenella
is recorded at
190-1389 m
(
Fraussen & Stahlschmidt 2013
; herein). The new species are attributed to
Phaenomenella
based on stronger conchological similarity to other species of the genus rather than to species of
Siphonalia
. Unfortunately the protoconch of
P. samadiae
n. sp.
was decollated in all available specimens, but the protoconch of
P. nicoi
n. sp.
is large globose, similar to other species of
Phaenomenella
.
The analysis of a broader dataset of Buccinoidea rejected the monophyly of
Siphonaliinae
in its original scope. None of the Recent genera, originally included by
Finlay (1928)
in the subfamily, that are
Penion, Aeneator
and
Glaphyrina
,
are closely related neither to each other, nor to
Siphonalia
.
The system of
Buccinidae
and Buccinoidea in general is still far from being resolved, with many problematic buccinoidean lineages (see e.g.
Couto
et al.
2016
;
Harasewych 2018
). Therefore the rank of the inferred clade
Siphonalia
+
Phaenomenella
can be resolved only after obtaining the robust phylogeny of the entire superfamily Buccinoidea.