Oxychilus (Drouetia) viridescens (Gastropoda: Pulmonata: Oxychilidae), a new species from Santa Maria, Açores, and a review of the subgenus
Author
De Frias Martins, António M.
Author
Brito, Carlos P.
Author
Backeljau, Thierry
text
Zootaxa
2013
3619
3
343
368
journal article
http://dx.doi.org/10.11646/zootaxa.3619.3.5
1557e4fb-c16a-447b-a152-f4a08a8739b8
1175-5326
217371
4FB7A97C-D25F-41C8-8C62-2664E6E6F148
Reviewing
Drouetia
Gude,
1911
and
Atlantoxychilus
Riedel,
1964
The genus with the highest number of endemic taxa in the Azorean biota is the molluscan
Oxychilus
, of which the subgenus
Drouetia
accounts for
8
of the
15
hitherto described endemic species of that genus. However,
Drouetia
was first monotypic (Gude
1911
), for its
type
species,
Helix atlantica
, was considered to live throughout most islands of the Azores (Morelet
1860
). It was only through Riedel’s (
1964
) anatomical research that the diversity of
Drouetia
started to be noticed, and Martins (
2005
) has provided evidence that the number of known species remains understated. Besides the three species from Santa Maria sufficiently dealt with above, five more species are known: two from São Miguel,
O. (D.)
atlanticus
and
O. (D.)
batalhanus
de Winter,
1989
; two from Terceira,
O. (D.)
miceui
Martins,
1989
and
O. (D.)
furtadoi
; one from Faial,
O.(D.)
minor
Riedel,
1964
.
Atlantoxychilus
is represented by one, already mentioned species:
O. (A.)
spectabilis
.
Oxychilus (Drouetia) atlanticus
(
Fig.
18
C,
19, 20
A). The history of this taxon has been dealt with above (see
Remarks
). Martins (
1991
) first reported the anatomical variability of
O. (D.)
atlanticus
throughout São Miguel and, although calling attention to variability as an artifact of preservation, recognized the possibility of additional species, namely Riedel’s (
1964
) “small form” and the population of Sete Cidades. Nevertheless, Martins’ (
2005
) extended analysis interpreted those differences as allotopic, demic variability. However, further anatomical and morphometric research has revealed syntopic variability, with different shell and genitalia patterns existing sympatrically, thus suggesting the existence of various taxonomic units in São Miguel (Martins
et al
.
2010
), the description of which is presently under way.
Oxychilus
(D.)
atlanticus
needed, thus, to be unequivocally characterized. To this end, a
neotype
was proposed so to restrict
O. (D.)
atlanticus
to the large shell phenotype living in Sete Cidades, São Miguel (ICZN Case
3553
; Martins
et al.
2011
). However, this proposal is no longer needed, since the recent discovery of Drouët´s collection of Azorean material, with specimens from São Miguel, provided a suitable
lectotype
for
Helix atlantica
(MJSD.
2012
.CO.
68
a;
Fig.
19
). The specimen selected is the largest of a lot of
48
(diameter 7.8 mm; height, 4.8 mm; number of whorls,
6
) and conforms with the measurements given in the original description (maximum diameter,
8 mm
; height,
5 mm
; Morelet & Drouët
1857
). Due to the taxonomic and morphological complexity of
Drouetia
in São Miguel and the importance of anatomy and locality for species identification (Martins
1991, 2005
), the
type
locality for
Helix atlantica
Morelet & Drouët
is herein restricted to Caldeira das Sete Cidades. Indistinguishable from the following species on the basis of shell morphology alone,
O. (D.)
atlanticus
has a darker border of the mantle and the foot sole is yellowish; however, it is readily identified anatomically, namely by the long epiphallus, the long and narrow bursa duct and large bursa, and, inside the penis, the reticulate ornamentation on the penial caecum and around the epiphallic pore.
Oxychilus
(D.)
batalhanus
de Winter,
1989
(
Fig.
18
D,
20
B). Conchologically indistinguishable from the previous species,
O. (D.)
batalhanus
was proposed on the basis of the morphology of the penial complex (de Winter
1989
). Martins (
1991
) showed that the proportions of various structures of the penial complex, namely the penial caecum, can change as an artefact of preservation methods and, therefore, are by themselves unreliable diagnostic characters. For that reason
O. (D.)
batalhanus
was considered a junior synonym of
O. (D.)
atlanticus
(Martins
2005
). Recent research based mostly on the internal morphology of the penis (Martins
et al.
2010
) has provided evidence for the existence of various taxonomic units in São Miguel; restriction of
O. (D.)
atlanticus
to the anatomically different Sete Cidades population restores the validity of
O. (D.)
batalhanus
. Although very variable, when compared with the previous species
O. (D.)
batalhanus
shows a lighter blue border of the mantle and the foot is pinkish to orange, sometimes greenish; it is diagnosed by the short vagina, the membranous proximal penis with weak crests radiating from the epiphallic pore, the strongly muscular distal penis with strong pilasters inside.
Oxychilus
(D.)
batalhanus
is distributed throughout the entire island of São Miguel.
FIGURE 17.
Shell morphometry in
Oxychilus
(Drouetia)
viridescens
n.sp.
(*) and
Oxychilus
(Drouetia)
brincki
(o).
A
. Relationship di/#w.
B.
Relationship he/sp. Abbreviations: di, shell diameter; he, height of the shell; sp, height of the spire; #w, number of whorls. Holotype within square.
FIGURE 18.
Animals of species of
Drouetia
and
Atlantoxychilus
.
A
,
Oxychilus (
Drouetia
)
viridescens
, Sta
7.
B
,
Oxychilus
(
Drouetia
)
agostinhoi
, Sta
7.
C
,
Oxychilus
(
Drouetia
)
atlanticus
(NHMUK 20100653), Sete Cidades, São Miguel.
D
,
Oxychilus
(Drouetia)
batalhanus
, Batalha
, São
Miguel
(type locality).
E
,
Oxychilus
(
Drouetia
) miceui
, paratype, Caldeira de Santa Bárbara, Terceira.
F
,
Oxychilus
(
Drouetia
)
furtadoi
: paratype, Fonte da Telha, Posto Santo, Terceira.
G
,
Oxychilus
(
Drouetia
) minor
, Ribeirinha
, Faial
.
H
,
Oxychilus
(Atlantoxychilus)
spectabilis
, Sta
7.
FIGURE 19.
Lectotype of
Helix
atlantica
Morelet
& Drouët
, Muséum Jardin des Sciences de Dijon, France (MJSD.2012.CO.68 a), São Miguel. Scale bar = 1 mm.
Oxychilus
(D.)
miceui
Martins,
1989
(
Figs.
18
E,
21
A). This species lives on the mountains of Terceira and is characterized by the yellow to whitish mantle spotted with small brown to blackish patches, contrasting with the dark-blue mantle border and neck, fading to light-blue toward the foot. The shell has a depressed spire, the last whorl a quadrangular profile, the aperture is slightly wider than that of the following species. Anatomically this species is characterized by a long, convoluted oviduct and moderately long vagina, a membranous proximal penis and penial caecum cumulatively as long as the muscular distal penis, both units usually separated by a constriction.
Oxychilus
(D.)
furtadoi
Martins,
1989
(
Figs.
18
F,
21
B). This species lives at lower altitude around the town of Angra do Heroísmo, Terceira. Conchologically similar to
O. (D.)
miceui
, it has a slightly narrower aperture. The mantle has a greenish-brown background spotted with sparse, small whitish patches, the mantle border and neck light-blue, turning pinkish toward the foot. The reproductive anatomy is characterized by a long, narrow vagina, a short, membranous proximal penis and penial caecum, a long, narrow, muscular distal penis and an equally long penial sheath; the epiphallus is long, the distal third connected to the distal penis by muscular strands.
Oxychilus
(D.)
minor
Riedel,
1964
(
Figs.
18
G,
21
C). This species was first referred by Morelet (
1860
) as variety “β
minor
”, and it was Riedel (
1964
) who considered it a discrete taxon, attributing authorship and date to Morelet (
1860
). Bank
et al.
(
2002
), however, interpreted Morelet’s word “
minor
” not as a name but as part of the description, thus attributing authorship and date to Riedel (
1964
). The animal of
O. (D.)
minor
is characteristically pink, the mantle mottled with white patches and rare dark spots, posterior tentacles dark-blue becoming lighter toward the base. The shell has a depressed spire and the aperture is somewhat wide. The most peculiar anatomic feature is the stout, strongly muscular penis without noticeable constriction, with strong pilasters running back to the penial caecum.
Oxychilus (Atlantoxychilus) spectabilis
(Milne-Edwards,
1885
)
(
Fig.
18
H). Hausdorf (
1993
) considered
Helix atlantica
var.
spectabilis
Morelet,
1860
to be a primary homonym of
Helix spectabilis
Pfeiffer,
1844
, and introduced accordingly the new name
Oxchilus (
Atlantoxychilus
) riedeli
. However, Bank
et al
(
2002
) considered Hausdorf’s (
1993
) nomenclatorial action invalid, for Morelet’s (
1860
) indication of a “γ
var. spectabilis
” did not constitute attribution of a name to the variety, the word “
spectabilis
” instead being part of the description of variety γ. The name was validly introduced by Milne-Edwards (
1885
) as
Hyalinia spectabilis
, which is not preoccupied. Some aspects of this species were already dealt with, and only a brief morphological characterization will be added. The mantle is brown, crossed by elongated, irregular golden-brown blotches; border of mantle light-brown; neck dark-brown, sharply separated from the golden-brown foot which is surrounded by an intermittent brown rim.